Two and a Half Days with His Martyred Wife in the Refrigerator: The Story of a Father Who Could Not Bury His Wife and Children Who Kept Calling for Their Mother
In Gaza: When Grief Becomes Greater Than Words
In the early days of the genocide in Gaza, as Israeli occupation forces advanced toward the outskirts of the Gaza Strip, the town of Beit Hanoun was living through some of its darkest hours. Many residents did not realize how close the occupation forces had come, so they remained inside their homes, clinging to what little hope they had left and trying to survive amid bombardment, fear, and siege.
Inside one of those homes lived a simple family: a father, a mother, and their children, struggling to endure like thousands of other families. They had managed to store some food and had a solar power system that helped them survive those dark days, believing it might give them a better chance of staying alive.
But war does not ask permission.
One day during the siege, the mother was holding her infant child in her arms. It was an ordinary moment in the life of a mother who spent her days embracing her children, protecting them, and giving them comfort. She did not know it would be the last moment of her life.
Suddenly, a bullet fired by an Israeli occupation soldier pierced her body. She collapsed to the ground in front of her husband and children, and within a single second, life inside that home turned into a tragedy beyond words.
The husband rushed toward her in disbelief. He called her name again and again. He shook her gently, trying desperately to wake her. He attempted to save her and revive her by every means he could think of. He clung to every shred of hope, refusing to accept the reality unfolding before his eyes.
But the truth was too cruel to deny.
His wife, his life partner, and the mother of his children had been killed.
The man sat beside her in shock, unable to comprehend what to do next. He could not leave the house because of the siege, the snipers, and the danger surrounding them. He could not even give his wife the basic dignity of a proper burial.
Imagine losing the person dearest to your heart and then being denied the chance to say goodbye.
He spent hours thinking of a way to preserve his wife’s dignity. He looked at her face, at his children, and at the walls that imprisoned them all. Then he made a decision he had never imagined he would have to make.
He placed his wife’s body inside the refrigerator.
Not because his heart could bear it, but because he had no other choice.
He carefully placed her inside, closed the door, and tied it shut with ropes so that it would not open, as if he were trying to protect her one last time or delay a farewell he was not ready to face.
But the real pain stood before that refrigerator every day.
Her young children would stand before the closed door and call out:
“Mom… Mom… Mom…”
They waited for her to come out as she always had.
They believed she could hear them.
They believed she would answer.
Their father stood helpless before those heartbreaking cries. He watched his children reaching their hands toward the refrigerator, calling for their mother while tears filled his eyes.
Later, the father said that the hardest thing he had ever experienced was not the siege, not the hunger, and not even the fear of death.
It was watching his children call for their martyred mother while he was unable to explain the truth.
How can a small child understand that his mother will never come back?
How can a broken-hearted father tell his children that the arms they once ran to for comfort are gone forever?
He said he cried silently, grieving for his children even more than for himself. He did not know what to tell them, how to convince them that their mother had left this world, or how to ask them to stop waiting for her.
The hours passed with unbearable slowness.
The siege grew harsher.
And the refrigerator holding his wife’s body stood in the corner of the house as a silent witness to a tragedy beyond imagination.
Many times, the man thought about leaving the house and confronting the occupation forces, regardless of the outcome. He thought about ending all the pain at once.
But then he would look at his children.
He saw the fear in their eyes.
He knew they had no one left in this world except him.
So he endured.
He endured for them.
He remained strong for them.
And he continued trying to protect them even as his heart bled with every passing moment.
The siege lasted for two and a half days.
Two and a half days spent beside his children and the body of his martyred wife inside the refrigerator.
Two and a half days of tears, fear, waiting, and helplessness.
Two and a half days during which he could not bury her, say goodbye to her, or give her the grave she deserved.
Then, at last, relief arrived.
After a limited withdrawal of Israeli occupation forces, civil defense crews were finally able to reach the area. They found the father, his children, and the body of the martyred wife, and evacuated them from the scene.
This story was recounted by one of the civil defense workers who personally participated in the rescue operation. It became known to many residents of northern Gaza who lived through those painful days and witnessed their horrors.
This is not a story from a novel.
It is not a scene from a movie.
It is not the imagination of a writer trying to exaggerate suffering.
This is a true story from Gaza.
The story of a mother killed while holding her baby.
The story of a father forced to place his wife’s body in a household refrigerator because he could not bury her.
And the story of children who stood for two and a half days before that refrigerator door, calling for their mother, unaware that death had taken her from them forever.
It is one of thousands of stories that never reached television screens, and one of countless tragedies endured by the people of Gaza away from the cameras.
Once again, this article is based on a true story told by a civil defense worker who witnessed these events firsthand. We ask only that you respect the reality and suffering of the people of Gaza, remember them in your prayers, and help them in any way you can.
Behind every number announced, every image published, and every headline that quickly disappears, there is a human being who once had a life, dreams, a family, and a story that may be more painful than words can ever describe.






My heart is shattered once again. Life has become so surreal, both within the genocide and for those of us bearing witness to this and so many other unbearable losses. The pain we are all feeling is indescribable, the loss to humanity with every killing incalculable. My heart cries out every day for divine intervention, because that seems to be all that’s left. Our hope is in the Almighty, the Merciful, the One Creator who loves his children with a love that is so much greater than we can imagine. Please come, and come quickly, to rescue us from this darkness!! ❤️🔥🕊️🙏🪽🪽
EVERY PERSON IN AMERICA SHOULD READ THIS. It’s just so incredibly sad. We must stop foreign influence in our elections and stop paying with our sweat and tears being taxed to DO THIS!!!! WAKE UP AMERICA. THIS IS WRONG.