“It’s a miracle we survived,” Mr. Botera, 43, said. “If the rocket had hit one floor up, I wouldn’t be here to tell you.”
On Friday, they had a small suitcase packed. They were going to a hotel in Tel Aviv to decompress for a few days.
The afternoon was punctuated by dull thuds from Gaza and occasional sharp booms in the blue skies above. Sderot, a town that has endured 20 years of rocket attacks, is so close to Gaza that sometimes rockets fall here or are intercepted by the Iron Dome before the siren sounds.
Meir Manor, 63, had moved to the cul-de-sac where Ido was killed three years ago from a rural village, “to show solidarity with the people here,” he said.
He said it was important that people stay and show a presence.
“If everyone runs away, we might as well close up the country and leave,” he said. “We have to be brave and strong.”
At Ido’s funeral on Friday, his father, Asaf Avigal, eulogized him. Ido’s mother, who was badly wounded in the attack, was still in the hospital.
“I’m sorry I did not take the shrapnel in your place,” Mr. Avigal said, according to Israel’s N12 news channel. “A few days ago, you asked me: ‘Dad, what will happen if the siren goes off while we are outdoors?’ I told you that so long as you were with me you would be protected. I lied.”