Gaza doctor receives charred bodies of her nine children while on duty
Paediatrician Alaa al-Najjar was treating victims of
Israeli attacks when her children were killed in a strike on their home
By Maha
Hussaini in
Gaza City, occupied Palestine
Published date: 24 May 2025
https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/gaza-doctor-receives-bodies-her-nine-children-while-duty
A Palestinian paediatrician received the charred bodies of
nine of her children while on duty after an Israeli strike hit her home in Khan Younis, in the
southern Gaza Strip.
Dr Alaa al-Najjar, a paediatric specialist at
al-Tahrir hospital within the Nasser Medical Complex, was treating victims of
ongoing Israeli attacks across the strip on Friday when she was shocked to find
her own children and husband brought into the hospital.
The children - the eldest aged 12 and the youngest
just six months - were severely burned in the bombing.
Shortly before the strike, Najjar had left for work
with her husband, Hamdi al-Najjar, who then returned home.
Not long after, an Israeli bombardment struck their
house in the Qizan al-Najjar area in southern Khan Younis, killing nine of
their 10 children and wounding the 10th.
Najjar’s husband, who sustained serious injuries,
remains in intensive care.
Footage released by the Palestinian Civil
Defence showed rescue crews pulling the children’s bodies from the rubble
as flames still engulfed the family's home.
Hampered by a lack of proper equipment and the vast
scale of destruction, civil defence workers could be heard calling into
the rubble, desperately searching for signs of life.
Civil defence teams reported that seven bodies were
recovered and transferred to Nasser hospital, where their mother works.
Two others, including the six-month-old baby, remain
trapped under the rubble.
The children were identified as Yahya, Rakan, Ruslan,
Jubran, Eve, Revan, Sayden, Luqman and Sidra.
'Steadfast woman'
Najjar insisted on returning to work shortly after
giving birth to her youngest child six months ago, determined to treat child
victims amid relentless attacks and a dire shortage of medical staff.
In a testimony given to Middle East Eye, Dr Yousef Abu
al-Rish, undersecretary of the Palestinian health ministry, said: “I
learned that our colleague, Dr Alaa al-Najjar, was standing in front of the
surgery room, waiting for any news about her son - the only surviving child out
of 10. I rushed there, sensing I was about to witness a unique example of
humanity: a doctor who left her own children behind in Gaza, a place where even
attempting to describe the suffering only deepens the anguish.
“She left them to fulfil her duty to all the sick
children who have nowhere else to turn but Nasser hospital, a place
choking with the cries of innocent souls.
“There were men and women lined up, their faces
clouded with confusion. I scanned the anxious faces and immediately recognised
the most devastated expression. I began searching for words to comfort her, but
she pointed to another woman.
“Calm, patient and filled with faith - that was Dr
Alaa al-Najjar. The last thing I expected was that this steadfast woman was the
one who lost her children.”
The reality of healthcare workers
According to the Palestine Red Crescent Society, at
least 1,400 healthcare professionals have been killed in Israeli attacks since
7 October 2023.
“This is the reality our medical staff in Gaza endure.
Words fall short in describing the pain,” Dr Munir al-Bursh, director general
of the Palestinian ministry of health, said in a post on X, commenting on the attack.
“In Gaza, it is not only healthcare workers who are
targeted. Israel’s aggression goes further, wiping out entire families.”
In addition, at least 111 civil defence workers have
also been killed.
On Thursday, the health ministry reported that at
least 53,822 Palestinians - including 16,503 children - have been killed in
ongoing Israeli attacks across the blockaded Strip.
Among the children killed, 916 were under one year
old; 4,365 were aged one to five; 6,101 were between six and 12; and 5,124 were
aged 13 to 17.
According to the health ministry and the civil
defence, thousands more remain missing and are presumed dead beneath the
rubble.
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