Killed for water: Siblings in Gaza torn apart by Israeli strike

In Gaza, even the most basic human acts, such as fetching water and helping a sibling, can cost a child their life.

In an emotional and heart-piercing piece, The Guardian highlights the tragic story of Palestinian nine-year-old Karam al-Ghussain, who was trying to bring water home to his forcibly displaced family when an Israeli missile struck the distribution point. His 10-year-old sister, Lulu, ran to help him carry the heavy jugs. Both were killed instantly. The brutal Israeli strike also took the lives of six other children and four adults, injuring 19 more, most of them minors.

 

The explosion was so violent that their small bodies were torn apart. Their mother, Heba, was not allowed to see them. “They didn’t let me say goodbye or even look at them one last time,” she told The Guardian, recalling how her brother tried to shield her from the horrific sight. “After that, I don’t remember anything. I lost touch with reality.”

Lulu’s real name was Lana. Her nickname, meaning “pearl”, captured her gentleness. “She had such a joyful personality, and a heart full of kindness,” Heba said. Karam, mature beyond his years, was affectionately called “Abu Sharik”, “my partner”, by his father, Ashraf. He once asked for a remote-controlled car, but Heba told him they couldn’t afford luxuries. “I wish I had spent everything I had to buy it for him so he could have played with it before he died.”

Both children were dreaming of food. Lulu craved musakhan, the Palestinian dish of roasted chicken with onions and sumac. Karam had been hoping for shawarma. “They had all kinds of food plans for me to prepare,” Heba told The Guardian.

After nearly two years of relentless Israeli strikes and a total siege imposed since March, even water in Gaza has become a scarce and deadly pursuit. Heba had believed sending the children to fetch water was safer than looking for food. The station was just a few streets away from the school where they were sheltering, their home already destroyed by earlier airstrikes.



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