10/7/2025–|Last update: 18:26 (Mecca time)
A report published by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz said that dozens of Israeli families lost their homes as a result of the Iranian missile shelling last June, which caused widespread damage and left hundreds of people without permanent shelter.
Maryam Qaddoura told Haaretz that her life had completely collapsed in one moment, and she went to a scattered virginity, after the Iranian missiles destroyed her apartment in a settlement Ramat Gan Last month, her husband was wounded.
She added that the most hurt is not the loss of her home, but rather the tear of her life, according to the report prepared by journalists Ran Shimoni, Idin Suleiman and Bar Bielig.
According to the report, Mary, French-Israeli and her husband, immigrated to Israel 6 years ago, and now she finds herself homeless between hotels without permanent shelter.
The report indicated that the family has not obtained complete financial compensation yet, and that the bureaucratic procedures to obtain support require a great effort.

Lack of stability
And in a city Beersheba (It is one of the oldest Palestinian cities).
He explained that the family was forced to move between 5 temporary housing since the attack, including the homes of relatives, friends, and an interim apartment, provided by residents who traveled outside the country.
Kraos stated that the damage was also caused by his workshop in which he worked in ceramic, which was the source of his primary income, adding that the accumulated financial and administrative burdens hinder the restoration of their daily life.
“Our purposes are scattered in separate places and we do not have a fixed daily routine. We are constantly moving from one place to another in the car … and what is most hurt is the absence of a sense of stability and the loss of the house.”
Exit
And in the settlement Yam HouseThe Bulgarian 62 -year -old Melina Ranjevov said that her apartment had been severely damaged as she was now living in another city, and she made it clear that she had received pictures of the destruction of the apartment owner, and that she was immediately returned to an attempt to save what could be saved.
Just one day after the attack, Rangelov was quick to leave Israel heading to Bulgaria, where her daughter, Christina, met and her son -in -law, and then returned to Israel after the situation calmed down to try to restore some properties and arrange her living situation.
Christina told the newspaper that the family suffers financially and does not have any savings, and is currently struggling to obtain government compensation and housing aid, amid the slow procedures and the difficulty of reaching support.
Rangelov stated that she migrated from Bulgaria with her daughter and her husband more than 20 years ago, but she is not a Jewish origin, and her husband died in 2020, and she is now looking at the option of leaving Israel and returning to her country because she stopped working since the bombing and her financial situation is very difficult.
The report concluded that the crisis resulting from the recent Iranian bombing is not limited to dead and wounded, but also includes hundreds of families that have become homeless and suffer from escalating economic and psychological crises in light of the slowdown in the government response.