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'I just want to walk to their graves': Gaza mother who lost four daughters and leg in Israeli strike
SHOTLIST: GAZA, PALESTINE (OCTOBER 8, 2025) (ANADOLU - ACCESS ALL) 1. VARIOUS OF INTERVIEW WITH PALESTINIAN HANIN AL-MABHOUH / CLOSE SHOTS OF HER INJURED ARM AND LEG / MOTHER HANIN AL-MABHOUH SHOWING PHOTOS OF HER LATE DAUGHTERS ON PHONE SCREEN GAZA, PALESTINE - OCTOBER 8, 2025: In the heart of war-torn Gaza, 34-year-old Hanin al-Mabhouh from the Nuseirat Refugee Camp has lost nearly everything to Israel’s relentless bombardment: her four daughters, her right leg, and the life she once knew. Now, her only wish is to walk again, just far enough to reach her children’s graves. Since the start of Israel’s genocide in Gaza two years ago, more than 67,000 Palestinians have been killed and over 39,000 families have been victims of mass killings, according to local authorities. Among them, 2,700 families (8,574 people) have been wiped out entirely, while 6,020 families have only a single survivor left. For al-Mabhouh, like thousands of other Palestinians, the military campaign turned her world upside down. Before the genocide, she lived a peaceful life, taking her daughters to school, helping with homework, and caring for her home. But one night of terror destroyed everything. “This isn’t a war; it’s genocide,” she says firmly. “No Arab or Muslim country has experienced what we are living through. Even under blockade, we once had a life, but now there’s nothing left.” Her family’s ordeal began on July 10, 2024, when an airstrike hit their home as they slept. “We were attacked in our sleep,” she recalls. “I was severely injured. My husband suffered second- and third-degree burns. The explosion threw us in different directions, me, my husband, and our five-month-old baby on one side, my other daughters on the other. My arms and legs were broken, my pelvis and jaw shattered. I couldn’t see for a long time due to severe eye infections. I spent 40 days in intensive care.” Her right leg was later amputated due to infection. Surgeons managed to save her left leg, though it remains severely damaged. “Doctors replaced the metal plates many times,” she says. “But the bones just won’t heal.” The loss that cut deepest, however, was not physical. “My life is paralyzed,” she says quietly. “There’s nothing left to make me happy. My life used to shine like a candle, but that light went out with my daughters.” Her four girls, Mirna (10), Yasmin (8), Jannat (5), and baby Rim (5 months), were all killed in the strike. “I lost them all in an instant,” she says. “My life ended that day.” Now, al-Mabhouh dreams of recovery, of fitting a prosthetic leg, saving the other from amputation, and one day walking again. “I don’t want to go backward anymore,” she says. “I want to move forward. I want to have another child, to rebuild a family, to create new memories. But before anything else, I want to walk, just to visit my daughters’ graves and finally say goodbye.”
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