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The worst nightmare: Relatives recall Gaza strike that devastated family

The worst nightmare: Relatives recall Gaza strike that devastated family

Kuwait Timesa day ago

The worst nightmare: Relatives recall Gaza strike that devastated family
'Death is sometimes kinder than this torture'
GAZA CITY: Alaa Al-Najjar was tending to wounded children at a hospital in the southern Gaza Strip when the news came through: the home where her own 10 children were staying had been bombed in a Zionist air strike. The pediatrician, with no means of transport, ran from the Nasser Hospital to the family house in the city of Khan Yunis, a relative told AFP, only to be met with every parent's worst nightmare. 'When she saw the charred bodies, she started screaming and crying,' said Ali Al-Najjar, the brother of Alaa's husband. Nine of her children were killed, their bodies burned beyond recognition, according to relatives. The tenth, 10-year-old Adam, survived the strike but remains in critical condition, as does his father, Hamdi Al-Najjar, also a doctor, who was also at home when the strike hit. Both are in intensive care at Nasser Hospital. When the body of her daughter Nibal was pulled from the rubble, Alaa screamed her name, her brother-in-law recounted.
The following day, under a tent set up near the destroyed home, the well-respected pediatric specialist sat in stunned silence, still in shock. Around her, women wept as the sounds of explosions echoed across the Palestinian territory, battered by more than a year and a half of war.
The air strike on Friday afternoon was carried out without warning, relatives said. Asked about the incident, the Zionist entity military said it had 'struck a number of suspects who were identified operating from a structure' near its troops, adding that claims of civilian harm were under review.
'I couldn't recognize the children in the shrouds,' Alaa's sister, Sahar al-Najjar, said through tears. 'Their features were gone.' 'It's a huge loss. Alaa is broken,' said Mohammed, another close family member. According to medical sources, Hamdi Al-Najjar underwent several operations at the Jordanian field hospital. Doctors had to remove a large portion of his right lung and gave him 17 blood transfusions. Adam had his arm severely wounded and suffers from severe burns across his body.
'I found my brother's house like a broken biscuit, reduced to ruins, and my loved ones were underneath,' Ali Al-Najjar said, recalling how he dug through the rubble with his bare hands alongside paramedics to recover the children's bodies. Now, he dreads the moment his brother regains consciousness. 'I don't know how to tell him. Should I tell him his children are dead? I buried them in two graves.' 'There is no safe place in Gaza,' he added with a weary sigh. 'Death is sometimes kinder than this torture.' — AFP

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