Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestine – The ceasefire in Gaza was supposed to start out at 8.30am (06:30 GMT). The al-Qidra household had endured 15 months of Israeli assaults. They’d been displaced greater than as soon as and have been residing in a tent. Their kin had been among the many greater than 46,900 Palestinians killed by Israel.
However the al-Qidras had survived. They usually wished to go house.
Ahmed al-Qidra packed his seven youngsters onto a donkey cart and headed to jap Khan Younis. It was lastly secure to journey – the bombing ought to have stopped.
However the household didn’t know that the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas had been delayed. They didn’t know that, even in these further few hours, Israeli plane have been nonetheless flying over the skies of Gaza, able to drop their bombs.
The explosion was loud. Ahmed’s spouse Hanan heard it. She had stayed behind at a relative’s house within the centre of town, organising their belongings, planning on becoming a member of her husband and youngsters a couple of hours later.
“The blast felt prefer it hit my coronary heart,” Hanan mentioned. She instinctively knew that one thing had occurred to her youngsters, whom she had solely simply mentioned goodbye to.
“My youngsters, my youngsters!” she screamed.
The cart had been hit. Hanan’s eldest son, 16-year-old Adly, was lifeless. So was her youngest, six-year-old Sama, the newborn of the household.
Yasmin, 12, defined {that a} four-wheel drive was in entrance of the cart carrying individuals celebrating the ceasefire. Maybe that was the rationale the missile hit.
“I noticed Sama and Adly mendacity on the bottom, and my father bleeding and unconscious on the cart,” Yasmin mentioned. She pulled her eight-year-old sister Aseel out earlier than a second missile hit the spot the place they’d been. Eleven-year-old Mohammed additionally survived.
However Ahmed, Hanan’s accomplice in life, was pronounced lifeless within the hospital.

‘My youngsters have been my world’
Sitting on the sting of her injured daughter Iman’s hospital mattress in Khan Younis’s Nasser Hospital, Hanan was nonetheless shell-shocked.
“The place was the ceasefire?” she requested. Of their pleasure to lastly return to no matter was left of their house, the household had missed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declaring that the Palestinian group Hamas had not despatched over the names of the three Israeli captives who can be launched on Sunday as a part of the ceasefire deal.
They’d not seen Hamas clarify that there have been technical causes for the delay, and that the names can be offered, as they finally have been.
They’d not know that within the three-hour delay earlier than the ceasefire finally started, three members of their household can be killed. They have been among the many 19 Palestinians killed by Israel in these previous few hours, in accordance with Gaza’s Civil Defence.

Hanan broke down in tears. She would now must face life with out her husband and with out two of her youngsters. The lack of Sama, “the final of the bunch” as she described her with the Arabic saying, was significantly exhausting.
“Sama was my youngest and probably the most spoiled. She’d get offended at any time when I talked about having one other little one.”
Adly had been her “pillar of assist”. Her youngsters have been her world.
“We endured this complete battle, dealing with the harshest circumstances of displacement and bombardment,” Hanan mentioned. “My youngsters handled starvation, an absence of meals and fundamental requirements.”
“We survived greater than a 12 months of this battle, just for them to be killed in its final minutes. How can this occur?”
A day of pleasure had been changed into a nightmare. The household had celebrated the top of the battle the evening earlier than.
“Hasn’t the Israeli military had sufficient of our blood and the atrocities they dedicated for 15 months?” Hanan requested.
Then, she considered her future. Together with her husband and two of her youngsters ripped away from her, and with tears coming down her face, she requested: “What’s left?”