There was something eerie, yet uplifting to be aboard a bus where dozens of Jewish mothers listened attentively to one of the passengers recite the Traveler’s Prayer while we drove along Road 232.

That road, now commonly referred to as “the Road of Death,” was once a scenic artery that connected the agricultural fields in Israel’s South to the kibbutzim adjacent to the Gaza border. On October 7, many who attended the Supernova music festival hoped the road would be their path to freedom. However, most of them were instead gunned down by terrorists. Hours later, the road became ground zero for the firefight between the IDF and Hamas terrorists who infiltrated Israel.

Today, driving along the now historic pavement is a journey of witnessing immense loss and grief, but also a yearning to rebuild.

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