The ruins of Tel Qedesh sit on a high plain in northern Israel near the border with Lebanon. Today, the pathway to ruin is overgrown with large, dry plants that bloomed earlier in the year and have now mostly withered from the heat. Some of the plants have thorns.

The site consists of a giant ruined building, with part of one wall intact. The partial wall, shaped like a large triangle, is made of giant stones, each around half the size of a person. There is a doorway and several large columns nearby, as if someone forgot to erect them.

Qedesh sits on the border of Lebanon. It is an ancient site dating to an era when this land was Canaan and later to the early Israeli Kingdoms. Later it became a Phoenician city linked to Tyre in Lebanon. By the 1940s, a small Shi’ite village was nearby, until it was abandoned in 1948.

The ruins of Qedesh are a reminder of the changes in this landscape. It is also a reminder that this area of the border with Lebanon has deep historical ties. Today the border is quiet, but there have been around 1,000 days of conflict with Hezbollah. Hezbollah attacked Israel on October 8, 2023, a day after the Hamas attack.

We now know that Hezbollah refrained from carrying out an October 7-type attack, declining to join Hamas in a massive human-wave assault. Hezbollah instead girded its loins for a long war.

Sunrise on Solstice day, the year's longest day in the northern Hemisphere, due to Earth's Axial Tilt as seen from Mount Arbel and Tiberias, Sea of Galilee, northern Israel, June 21, 2026.
Sunrise on Solstice day, the year's longest day in the northern Hemisphere, due to Earth's Axial Tilt as seen from Mount Arbel and Tiberias, Sea of Galilee, northern Israel, June 21, 2026. (credit: MICHAEL GILADI/FLASH90)

Hezbollah gambled on Israel's unwillingness to stay in conflict

Hezbollah gambled on the fact that Israel would not want to wage a long conflict inside Lebanon. In some ways, Hezbollah judged correctly. Israel won’t be sending armored brigades to Beirut or the Beka’a to root out the group. Instead, Israel has chosen to take over the border area, up to a few miles deep into Lebanon.

The border areas inside Lebanon have been mostly razed. Israel’s prime minister claimed on July 5 that some Christian villages in southern Lebanon prefer Israeli rule. It’s not clear which ones he is referring to. In the 1980s and 1990s, Israel worked with some Christians in Lebanon as part of the South Lebanon Army.

Israel left in 2000, and some SLA members came to Israel. However, most Christians had to accept a return to Lebanese and Hezbollah rule.

Before October 7, if one went to Tel Qedesh or other border areas, one could see Lebanese homes on the other side of the border. In Metulla, at the top of the Huleh Valley north of Kiryat Shmona, a half-hour drive from Tel Qedesh, one could see Hezbollah flags and posters.

Hezbollah openly operated near the border while the UNIFIL mission watched. Israel was expected to accept this as normal. In fact, Israel was deterred from doing anything about it.

Today things are different. I went up to Tel Qedesh as part of a trip to northern Israel.

From Tel Qedesh, where one can also view the reputed tombs of the Biblical Deborah and Barak, daubed in blue by devotees, I went to Ramot Naftali. This small Israeli community, founded in 1945, is located within view of Lebanon.

The Ramot Naftali winery, founded in 2003, is located here. On Friday, it was enjoying the warm summer day. Several people had come for wine. It did seem quiet here, as if these areas were awaiting returning tourists. I sampled several of their red and white wines.

There is a second winery in Ramot Naftali, called Naaman Winery, established in 2004. Together, these wineries make northern Israel and the Upper Galilee unique.

Down the road from Ramot Naftali, route 886 snakes over hills and through a quiet valley that feels hidden from the world. After traversing the valley, the road comes to another high plateau where the communities of Rihaniya and Alma are located. Rihaniya is one of two Circassian villages in Israel.

The Circassians are a Muslim group that comes from the Caucasus. Fleeing the Russian Empire, this group arrived in the area in the mid- and late 19th century. Circassians have also played an important role in Syria and Jordan. Many of them were displaced by the 1967 war from areas in and around the Golan.

Along with the Druze and Christian communities, they make up part of the mosaic of this area in northern Israel.

From Rihaniya, the road turns toward Kerem Ben Zimra and then Dalton. A little beyond is the Christian town of Jish. In Dalton there are also wineries. One is called Dalton Winery.

The tombs at Tel Qedesh, reputed by some to be those of Deborah and Barak of the Bible, have been painted blue by devotees.
The tombs at Tel Qedesh, reputed by some to be those of Deborah and Barak of the Bible, have been painted blue by devotees. (credit: SETH J. FRANTZMAN)

Its website notes that it was “established in 1995 by father and son Mat and Alex Haruni; the two identified the potential of the Upper Galilee, envisioning it as a premium wine-producing region.”

As you drive into Dalton, there are several signs advertising Rimon Winery. This site has a large warehouse and pretty outdoor area. There is food, including sandwiches and pastries, as well as wine and other goodies for sale. Music was playing, and many people were milling about, eating and enjoying the hours before Shabbat.

What was clear here is that visitors are returning to this area after the long war. Life is blooming again. Even though there may still be limited clashes with Hezbollah several miles away, there is a sense of calm and a desire to return to normal life.

Huleh valley beneath the Golan Heights

Not far from Dalton, passing back toward Tel Qadesh, the heights of land overlook the Huleh valley. Laid out below are not only the Huleh but also the Golan Heights and, in the distance, Hermon Mountain, shrouded in mist. The far-off mountain evokes the landscape of The Hobbit, suggesting a long journey ahead.

Overlooking the Valley is a stout, large structure, a kind of giant square building. This was a Taggart Fort in the British Mandate era.

It was built so the British police and security forces could control this area. Along with other Taggart forts, such as the one in Latrun, it became a site that both Jews and Arabs coveted in 1947 as civil war broke out in the lead-up to Israel’s independence.

In April, the British abandoned the fort, which is known in Hebrew as Metzudat Koach. In late April, Jewish fighters from the Palmach and Golani assaulted the site, and 28 Jewish fighters were killed. Later, the Yiftach brigade took the site on May 16. Today the important fort still overlooks these lands. Its structure has become the symbol of the Border Police, and the police use the building today.

Across from the large building is another interesting site here. Nabi Yusha is a historic Shi’ite tomb here. It commemorates Joshua of the Bible. Like many sites that Muslims revered in this land during the Ottoman and earlier periods, it has connections to Jewish history.

For instance, Muslims also commemorate Moses at Nabi Musa near the Dead Sea. According to Jewish tradition, the site is not connected to Moses. There are many such tombs in the country, including Nabi Samwil near Jerusalem and Nabi Rubin near Palmachim.

They are part of the landscape of holiness, which also includes many tombs revered by Jews. In the Galilee, this is especially true.

During the 1,000 days of war, this area near Tel Qadesh and Nabi Yusha was largely off-limits. There were large concrete barriers and checkpoints. New roads were even built to shield traffic from Hezbollah anti-tank fire.

The signs of the war are still visible from the increase in cement bunkers and shelters. However, some of the large concrete barriers have been removed.

Down in the valley, the roads are busy. The well-known Kavish 90 hamburger restaurant near Mahanayim is full of patrons. Throughout the war, it became a major way station on Route 90, popular with young people. In those days during the war, this road leading to Kiryat Shmona was often empty of traffic.

Soldiers came here to defend the area. Members of security teams left behind some of their symbols on walls, a recollection of the men and women who volunteered to guard evacuated communities in the valley.

After touring the northern border, I went to Had Nes overlooking the Sea of Galilee to stay in one of the small cabins there. From there, I also explored the Golan and visited the Gamla fortress.

Here, there are trails to the ancient Jewish fortress from the revolt against Rome. Predatory and carnivorous birds circle the area looking for carrion. Although some visitors have returned to walk the trails, the area is quiet.

Quiet is good for the north. However, for it to revive, visitors will need to return to these roads.