with their parents, abdul hamid and janan, who for more than 20 years have lived near the town of sidon in southern lebanon, in the small village of ain el delb. this peaceful village is now the site of the deadliest single attack in lebanon in almost two decades. we've spent weeks investigating what happened here — seeking answers from the israeli military and hezbollah, analysing health ministry data, videos, social media posts and speaking with survivors and witnesses. we've reconstructed the building and identified more than 100 people in the 17 apartments when the block was hit. behind each door, a different story of pain and loss. julia, ashraf and their parents were in apartment aa. one floor below, in apartment 3a, hawra and ali fares were hosting family displaced by the war. batoul had just arrived to stay with her sister. she, like nearly a million others in lebanon, fled her home to escape fighting. three floors below them, in —1a, denise al—baba lived with her husband mehyeddin and their two children, nermine and ali. that sunday, denise had invited her brother hisham over f