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As Alaa Al-Najjar prepared to go to work on the morning of Friday, May 23, 2025, at Al-Tahrir Hospital in Nasser Medical Complex, located in Khan Yunis, south of the Gaza Strip, she had no idea that this would be the last time she would see nine out of ten of her children. The doctor, who has been treating children since the outbreak of the war in Gaza over the past 18 months, gained widespread sympathy from followers on social media in recent hours, after her story and photos of her nine children killed in an Israeli airstrike went viral. One son survived, while the father suffered severe injuries. The Civil Defense in Gaza announced on Saturday that nine children of Al-Najjar and her husband, the doctor Hamdi Al-Najjar, were killed in an Israeli airstrike on the city of Khan Yunis, south of the besieged and devastated Strip. "Our crews transferred the bodies of nine child martyrs, some of them charred, from the home of Dr. Hamdi al-Najjar and his wife, Dr. Alaa al-Najjar, all of whom were their children," Mahmoud Basal, a civil defense spokesman in Gaza, told AFP. The civil defense spokesman added that "the Israeli occupation targeted the house" on Friday afternoon. While al-Najjar is grieving the loss of her children, her son Adam (10 years old) and her husband, the only ones to survive the bombing, were seriously injured in the raid, according to a medical source at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis. The wounded doctor, Hamdi al-Najjar, and his wife, Dr. Alaa al-Najjar, lost nine of their 10 children in an Israeli bombing of their home (Reuters). Dr. al-Najjar's children, the victims, are: Yahya, Rakan, Raslan, Jubran, Eve, Revan, and Saydin, while the children Luqman and Sidra remain under the rubble. The oldest is 12 years old and the youngest is 6 months old, according to local media. A photo of Alaa al-Najjar's children (above) and their bodies (circulating) "Alive with their Lord, provided for." Al-Najjar's sister, Sahar al-Najjar, a pharmacist in the Gaza Strip, said that her sister "received the news of the death of her nine children while trying to save the lives of other children at Nasser Medical Complex, where she works as a pediatrician. She kept running down the street toward the house to take one last look at them, but we couldn't identify the bodies. They were all in pieces... all charred." Sahar recounted the mother's first moments after the incident to a BBC podcast: "I told her, in shock: 'The children are gone, Alaa.' She answered me with faith and submission: 'They are alive with their Lord, provided for.'" A photo of the children of Dr. Alaa Al-Najjar and their father Hamdi Al-Najjar (X) Eyewitnesses: Al-Najjar is no exception “She stood behind me, shielding herself from me, when they took out her daughter Rifan, asking the Civil Defense to show her to her, assuming she was alive.” With this testimony, Dr. Alaa Al-Najjar’s brother-in-law, who works at Nasser Hospital, spoke about the mother’s tragedy, and continued to Palestinian media: “She is originally a pediatrician... We were taking out charred children, and she saw 4 charred bodies in front of her. Her husband and my brother took her in the morning, then returned to the children, and took her from the hospital to the displacement site.” He continued: “I found my brother injured and his son... and I did not find the rest of the children, and then they arrived charred.” The brother, Yousef Al-Najjar, continued: “I don’t know, my brother, why his children were bombed and slaughtered in this way?... To this day, I don’t know how I endured the shock. The ten, the oldest of whom was not yet a year old... were burned and disfigured. “There is no face, no hand.” In a related context, Tiziana Roggio, an Italian volunteer doctor at Nasser Hospital in the Gaza Strip, said that Dr. Alaa’s case “is not the first time a medical worker’s heart has been broken by the killing or wounding of a relative... Dr. Alaa was working when her children arrived dead at the hospital. This is something we never wanted to happen.” Graeme Groom, a British surgeon working at the hospital, told the BBC that he operated on her surviving 11-year-old son. Groom added that he was informed that the father, also a doctor, “has no political or military affiliations and does not appear to be prominent on social media.” Groom told the Guardian: “The last patient on my list today (Friday) was an 11-year-old boy. He looked much younger when we carried him onto the operating table.” “Dr. Alaa al-Najjar saw the charred bodies of her seven children pulled from the rubble – while two others remain missing – all while on duty at Nasser Medical Complex,” Mohammed Saqr, head of nursing at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, told the Guardian. “The horrific details recounted by Ali al-Najjar capture one of the most devastating tragedies to have befallen a pediatrician who dedicated her life to saving children, only to have her motherhood stolen in a moment of deafening silence and raging fire.” A Palestinian woman shows on her mobile phone a photo of two children from the al-Najjar family who were killed in an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip (Reuters). In a related development, Dr. Munir al-Bursh, director-general of the health ministry in the Gaza Strip, confirmed on his X account that the bombing occurred shortly after Hamdi al-Najjar dropped his wife off at work. "Just minutes after his return, a missile fell on their home," Al-Barsh said, adding that the father "is now in intensive care." Al-Barsh added in his tweet: "Dr. Hamdi Al-Najjar had the opportunity to travel and leave Gaza... but he chose to stay." Official obituary The Palestinian Ministry of Health also mourned the sons of Dr. Alaa Al-Najjar and her husband, Dr. Hamdi Al-Najjar, and said in a post on the ministry's official Facebook page: "With hearts filled with pain and with painful human feelings, the Palestinian Ministry of Health, the health sector family, and medical personnel in all the northern and southern governorates of the homeland, offer their deepest condolences and sympathy to the heroic doctor Alaa Al-Najjar, a pediatrician at Nasser Medical Complex, who lost nine of her children in one of the most heinous crimes committed by the Israeli occupation against our people in the Gaza Strip." The ministry promised that "this heinous crime is not an exception, but rather part of a systematic targeting of medical personnel and their institutions; it aims to break the will of the steadfast people in Gaza." The Egyptian Doctors Syndicate mourned Al-Najjar's children, describing her as the "Mother of Martyrs." The statement read: "In Gaza, life is snatched from the arms of mothers, and tragedies are written on the walls of homes before they are recorded in the annals of history." It continued: "The name Alaa Al-Najjar has become a symbol of tragedy and a living witness that what is happening there is not just a war waged by a brutal Israeli occupation, but rather an attempt to break the spirit." Several followers condemned the killing of Dr. Alaa Al-Najjar's children, most notably Norwegian doctor Mads Gilbert, professor of emergency medicine and "senior consultant" at the Emergency Medicine Clinic at the University Hospital of Northern Norway, who spent time in Gaza during the war. He posted a video on his X account, saying: "Dr. Alaa's home and her husband's were targeted, and her nine children were brutally killed... The doctor received her dead children during her work. She continues her work." He continued: "The Israeli occupation army is targeting families, hospitals, and healthcare workers with this genocide." Former Palestinian correspondent in Gaza, Wael al-Dahdouh, wrote: “What kind of force can endure all this pain… Dr. Alaa al-Najjar grieves over the martyrdom of 9 of her children.” The Israeli military responded: “The Israeli military said it could not comment on specific strikes without their precise geographic coordinates.” The Israeli military continued that it “struck a number of suspects who were observed operating from a building” near its forces. It added that “the Khan Yunis area is a dangerous war zone,” and that “the claim regarding harm to uninvolved civilians is under review.” The military added in a statement that the air force had struck more than 100 targets across the Strip over the past day, including members of “terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip, military installations, tunnels, and additional terrorist infrastructure.” Since the start of the war, the Palestinian death toll in Gaza has reached 53,901, the majority of whom were civilians, including women and children. At least 3,747 people have been killed since Israel resumed its airstrikes and military operations on March 18, 2025, after a fragile truce that lasted only two months, according to the latest tally released Saturday by the Ministry of Health in Gaza.