Hundreds of Hezbollah supporters gathered Friday evening at the location where the group's longtime leader was killed in Israeli airstrikes on a southern suburb of Beirut.

The area was decorated with a giant poster of the late leader Hassan Nasrallah and officials who were killed with him on Sept. 27, 2024. Symbolic coffins for the dead were also placed on a stand in the destroyed area.

One Hezbollah supporter at the gathering said "there can be no coexistence with Israel".

"This oppressive entity is against everything, against humanity, against justice", Ali Ajina added.

The airstrike in which dozens of bombs were dropped form the air destroyed an entire block under which Nasrallah was meeting with an Iranian general and some of his top military commanders.

Days later, Nasrallah’s successor, Hashem Safieddine, was killed in another series of airstrikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Nasrallah was buried in February in a nearby area three months after the 14-month Israel-Hezbollah ended with a U.S.-brokered ceasefire.

The event came a day after thousands of Hezbollah supporters gathered at a scenic overlook on Beirut’s coast and projected images of Nasrallah and Safieddine on the iconic arched Raouche rock to commemorate their deaths in Israeli airstrikes nearly a year ago.

The move came despite an apparent attempt by Lebanon’s Prime Minister Nawaf Salam to halt the planned light show.

The most recent Israel-Hezbollah war killed more than 4,000 people in Lebanon, including hundreds of civilians, and caused an estimated $11 billion worth of destruction, according to the World Bank. In Israel, 127 people died, including 80 soldiers.

The war started when Hezbollah began firing rockets across the border on Oct. 8, 2023, a day after a deadly Hamas-led incursion into southern Israel that sparked the war in Gaza.

Israel responded with shelling and airstrikes in Lebanon, and the two sides became locked in an escalating conflict that became a full-blown war in late September 2024.