In the devastated village of Al Mansoura, where Israeli airstrikes have reduced homes to rubble, a woman whose house is completely destroyed returns anyway, saying the south is her soul and she could not stay away — her children came with her, and only the house is gone.
The village mukhtar describes how he and seven other civilians entered during the first truce, were trapped for four days, ate lemons to survive, and watched as no state, no security force, and no Red Cross could reach them — two were martyred.
A man shows a cemetery where Israeli artillery and rockets hit the graves, breaking every headstone, and where the Israeli engineering corps also came — while Israeli forces still sit on the hill above, watching them every day.
Nine graves are being dug in Majdal Zoun for martyrs still in the mortuary, including two civilians, as a father whose daughter was martyred earlier now helps prepare graves for others, calling it returning a small kindness.
A woman whose two nephews were martyred stands among the destroyed homes and declares Israel is weaker than a spider's web, unafraid of more strikes — "They destroyed stone and land and people. What do they have left?"
The Israeli occupation army issues a new warning during the media tour, listing over a dozen villages including those surrounding the journalists, but the reporter refuses to leave, saying if Israel wants to kill them, they will kill them even knowing they are journalists.
A drone circles overhead for over an hour as villagers laugh and walk openly, violating the ceasefire but refusing to show fear. The Israeli enemy detonates a house in an adjacent village during the tour, columns of smoke rising behind the cameras as journalists document the ongoing demolitions.
At the shrine of Prophet Shimon in Al Bayada, an Israeli position is visible, and locals explain that the enemy now considers this the new yellow line, sweeping through daily and dropping sonic booms to terrorize returning civilians.
The episode closes with graves being prepared, martyrs awaiting burial, and Israeli forces still blowing up homes — all of it done, the reporter states, unjustly.