Inas Abu Maamar, whose picture while embracing the body of her five-year-old niece Saly went viral on local and international media, displays Saly’s picture on a mobile phone in Khan Yunis. Saly was killed in an Israeli air strike.—Reuters
Inas Abu Maamar, whose picture while embracing the body of her five-year-old niece Saly went viral on local and international media, displays Saly’s picture on a mobile phone in Khan Yunis. Saly was killed in an Israeli air strike.—Reuters

GAZA: In a photo, a Palestinian woman cradles a child in her arms, balanced on her knee. It is an image that resonates, as ancient as human history.

But in a grim inversion of the familiar, it sees that the child she holds close is a corpse, wrapped in a shroud. It is a quiet moment of intense grief. That woman wears a headscarf and her head is bowed. It was unidentifiable who she is and anything about the child — not even if it is a boy or girl.

The child is one of many who have lost their lives in the Israeli strikes on Gazans since Oct 7. Most have names will never know, whose deaths will spark a lifetime of grief for family members will never meet. In the 21st century, an average of almost 20 children a day have been killed or maimed in wars around the world, according to Unicef.

This news agency’s photographer Mohammad Salem was in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on Oct 17 at the Nasser Hospital morgue, where residents were going to search for missing relatives.

He saw the woman squatting on the ground in the morgue, sobbing and tightly embracing the child’s body.

“It was a powerful and a sad moment and I felt the picture sums up the broader sense of what was happening in the Gaza Strip,” he explained. “People were confused, running from one place to another, anxious to know the fate of their loved ones, and this woman caught my eye as she was holding the body of the little girl and refused to let go.” The moment was particularly poignant for Salem, whose wife gave birth to their own child just days previously.

In Gaza, where there have been communications blackouts, tracing people has been fraught with difficulties. But two weeks after the photo was taken, this news agency was able to track down the woman in the photo and interview her at her home in Khan Yunis.

She is Inas Abu Maamar and the body she was holding in the photo was that of her 5-year-old niece, Saly. Inas had raced to the house of her uncle when she had heard that it had been hit, and then on to the morgue.

“I lost my conscience when I saw the girl, I took her in my arms,” she said. “The doctor asked me to let go ... but I told them to leave her with me.” Saly’s mother and sister were also killed, along with Inas’ uncle and aunt. Saly was a favourite of Inas — she used to drop by her grandmother’s house on the way to kindergarten and ask her aunt to take photos of her.

“Most of the videos and pictures in my mobile are of her,” said Ines.

Saly’s 4-year-old brother Ahmed was outside the house when it was struck, and survived. He is now living with Inas. But he has little appetite to play, says Inas. He speaks seldom, other than to ask where his sister Saly is.

Published in Dawn, November 3rd, 2023

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