logo
Gaza photojournalist who wrote, ‘If I die, I want a resounding death' killed in Israeli airstrike

Gaza photojournalist who wrote, ‘If I die, I want a resounding death' killed in Israeli airstrike

CNN18-04-2025

Fatima Hassouna, a war documentarian who had covered the conflict in Gaza on the ground for 18 months, was killed along with seven members of her family in an Israeli strike this week.
'If I die, I want a resounding death, I do not want me in urgent news, nor in a number with a group,' Hassouna wrote in a post on Instagram in August 2024. 'I want a death that the world hears, an effect that remains for the extent of the ages, and immortal images that neither time nor space buries,' added the photojournalist, who is the subject of a new documentary to be screened at the Cannes Film Festival next month.
The health ministry in Gaza told CNN on Friday that Hassouna's parents survived the strike on Wednesday, but both suffered critical injuries and are in an intensive care unit.
The Palestinian Journalists' Protection Center (PJPC) said it mourns the loss of Hassouna. It said that the strike that killed her targeted her family's home on Al-Nafaq Street in Gaza City and also killed several of her family members. It described the attack as a 'crime' against journalists and a violation of international law.
'Fatima's powerful photos documenting life under siege were published globally, shedding light on the human toll of the war,' the center said.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Wednesday that the target was 'a terrorist in Hamas' Gaza City Brigade' and that steps were taken to mitigate the risk of harm to civilians. 'The terrorist planned and executed terror attacks against IDF troops and Israeli civilians,' the IDF said in a statement without providing further details.
Fatima's cousin Hamza Hassouna recounted the strike to CNN Friday. 'I was sitting when suddenly two rockets fell, one next to me and one in the living room. The house fell on us and everything was a disaster,' he said.
Hassouna posted her photos on Facebook and Instagram, where she had more than 35,000 followers. Her images documented the challenges of everyday life in Gaza and the threat of living under Israeli bombardment.
She was featured in Sepideh Farsi's documentary film, Put Your Soul On Your Hand And Walk, which has been selected to be screened in the ACID section at the 78th Cannes Film Festival in May 2025. A director's statement describes the film as 'a window, opened through a miraculous encounter with Fatima' into the 'ongoing massacre of the Palestinians.'
Following the news of Hassouna's death, the Iranian film director on Friday shared a photo on social media featuring herself on camera with Hassouna, who was smiling. 'My last image of her is a smile. I cling to it today,' Farsi wrote alongside the picture.
Speaking to CNN Friday, Farsi said Hassouna was 'a very bright and solar person, had an amazing smile and was an optimistic person by nature.' The film director said she had worked with Hassouna for more than a year on the documentary and that they got to know each other very well.
Farsi said the last time she contacted Hassouna was one day before her death to give her 'the happy news' about the documentary. 'We both discussed her traveling to France in May to present the documentary in Cannes with me, since she is the main protagonist,' Farsi said.
'I thought it was a mistake when I heard about her death,' Farsi added. 'I hope this documentary will shed light on her life in Gaza and serve as a tribute to her memory.'
According to the PJPC, the number of journalists who have died in the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023, has risen to 212, an unprecedented toll according to numerous journalist groups. The organization called on the international community to open an immediate investigation into the incident and hold those responsible to account.
Hassouna's neighbor, Um Aed Ajur, described Hassouna as proud of the work she was doing. She questioned the strike on her house, saying she and her family 'have no connection' to any group. 'We have been neighbors for 35 years and have never heard that they are connected to any (group),' she added.
Hassouna's final post on her Facebook page was a series of photos of Gaza fishermen by the sea last Saturday, less than a week before she was killed. She posted the pictures with a short poem.
'From here you get to know the city. You enter it, but you don't leave, because you won't leave, and you can't,' she wrote.
CNN's Lauren Izso contributed reporting

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel says it has killed leader of Palestinian militant group that took part in October 7 attack
Israel says it has killed leader of Palestinian militant group that took part in October 7 attack

CNN

time3 hours ago

  • CNN

Israel says it has killed leader of Palestinian militant group that took part in October 7 attack

The Israeli military says it has killed the leader of a Palestinian militant group that took part in the October 7, 2023, terror attacks on southern Israel. Asaad Abu Sharia, who led the Palestinian Mujahideen Movement and its armed wing the Mujahideen Brigades, was killed in a joint operation with Israel's Shin Bet security agency, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said on Saturday. His death and that of his brother Ahmed Abu Sharia were confirmed by the militant group hours after Gaza's Civil Defense reported that an Israeli airstrike had hit their family home in the Sabra area of Gaza City. Hamas run Al-Aqsa TV said the strike killed at least 15 people and injured several. Video showed people searching through the debris of a demolished four-story house. The Mujahideen Brigades took part in the October 7 attacks alongside Hamas and other Palestinian terror groups and took hostage some of the most high-profile captives, including a family whose suffering became a symbol of the attack. According to the Israeli military, Sharia was among the militant leaders who stormed Kibbutz Nir Oz, a small Israeli community near the Gaza border where many residents were killed or taken hostage during the brutal terror assault that led to Israel's war in Gaza. Despite not being aware of Hamas' plans in advance, fighters from the jihadist group joined in the cross-border assault 'as an extension of the Hamas attack,' the Israeli military said. According to Israel, Sharia was directly involved in the abduction and murders of Shiri, Ariel and Kfir Bibas – a family that became one of the most recognizable victims of the attack, partly because of the young ages of Kfir and Ariel, who were nine months and four years old respectively at the time. Kfir was the youngest hostage kidnapped into Gaza and the youngest to have been killed. The boys' mother, Shiri, was 32 at the time of her kidnap. Their father Yarden was also captured, but was released alive in February after 484 days in captivity. Reacting to news of Sharia's killing, the Bibas family expressed their 'heartfelt gratitude' to the Israeli military, saying his death was 'another step on the journey towards closure.' 'While Shiri, Ariel, and Kfir cannot be brought back, we find some measure of comfort knowing these despicable murderers will not harm another family,' the Bibas family said in a statement shared via the Hostages and Missing Families Forum. Israel's military said Sharia was also involved in the abduction of the Israeli-American couple Gad Haggai and Judi Lynn Weinstein Haggai and the abduction and killing of Thai national Nattapong Pinta. The Israeli-American couple were killed near their home in Kibbutz Nir Oz during the attack in 2023. The body of Nattapong, an agricultural worker who was abducted alive on October 7, was recovered from southern Gaza in a military operation on Friday. Israel said it believes the Mujahideen Brigades are still holding the body of an additional foreign national. The group has previously denied killing their captives.

Watch: CNN Stars Troll MAGA Panelist Amid Trump-Musk Feud
Watch: CNN Stars Troll MAGA Panelist Amid Trump-Musk Feud

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Watch: CNN Stars Troll MAGA Panelist Amid Trump-Musk Feud

A CNN panel teased one of their contributors mercilessly on Saturday morning over Donald Trump and Elon Musk's meteorically messy divorce this week. 'Oh, this is just so horrible. And you know, when this news broke, all I could think of was my dear friend Scott Jennings,' the network's data guru Harry Enten said of his pro-Trump fellow panelist. 'Scott, how have you dealt with this, are you doing okay?' Enten went on, his voice laden with faux concern. 'My heart goes out to you.' A MAGA loyalist and frequent CNN contributor, Jennings has spoken often and enthusiastically in support of both Trump and Musk in the past. His appearance on Saturday, however, came amid the spectacular and rapidly widening rift between the president and his former-top-campaign-donor-turned-government-efficiency czar. Following his departure as head of Trump's cost-cutting DOGE initiative, Musk this week launched a series of vicious and highly personal attacks against the president, taking shots at the White House's budget proposals while accusing Trump of being less than candid about his relationship with late pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein. 'Yeah, mom and dad are not doing so well right now,' CNN host Abby Phillips put it on Saturday. 'On Friday, (Trump) spent a big chunk of the day, the morning it seemed, calling around to network reporters, including our very own Dana Bash here at CNN and spinning a narrative because, I guess, maybe he was unsatisfied with how this was playing out without him.' Jennings, for his part, seemed content to take his fellow panelists' mockery on the chin. 'I'm perfectly fine,' he responded to Enten, adding: 'I do appreciate you offering to let me stay at your place for a while.'

Israeli military kills at least 95 people in Gaza as the body of a Thai hostage is recovered
Israeli military kills at least 95 people in Gaza as the body of a Thai hostage is recovered

Chicago Tribune

time4 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Israeli military kills at least 95 people in Gaza as the body of a Thai hostage is recovered

TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel said Saturday it retrieved the body of a Thai hostage abducted into the Gaza Strip during the Hamas-led attack that sparked the war, as Israel's military continued its offensive, killing at least 95 people in the past 24 hours, according to Gaza's health ministry. Nattapong Pinta had come to Israel to work in agriculture. Israel's government said he was seized from Kibbutz Nir Oz and killed early in the war, which began on Oct. 7, 2023. Thailand's foreign ministry said the bodies of two other citizens were yet to be retrieved. Thais were the largest group of foreigners held captive. Many lived on the outskirts of southern Israeli kibbutzim and towns, the first places overrun in the attack. Forty-six Thais have been killed during the war, according to the foreign ministry. Israel's defense minister said Pinta's body was retrieved from the Rafah area in southern Gaza. The army said he was seized by the Mujahideen Brigades, the small armed group that also took two Israeli-American hostages, Judih Weinstein and Gad Haggai, whose bodies were retrievedon Thursday. Israel's military later said it killed the head of the Mujahideen Brigades, As'ad Aby Sharaiya, in Gaza City on Saturday. Fifty-five hostages remain in Gaza. Israel says more than half are dead. Families rallied again Saturday evening in Israel, calling for a ceasefire deal to bring everyone home. Hamas issued an unusual warning about another hostage, Matan Zangauker, saying Israel's military had surrounded the area where he's held and that any harm that came to him during a rescue attempt would be Israel's responsibility. Israel's military didn't immediately comment. 'The decision to expand the (military) ground maneuver is at the cost of Matan's life and the lives of all the hostages,' Zangauker's mother, Einav, told the rally in Tel Aviv. A strike in Gaza City killed six members of a family, including two children, according to the Shifa and al-Ahli hospitals. Israel's military said the strike targeted the Mujahideen Brigades leader. 'This is the real destruction,' a man said as he carried the body of a small boy from the scene. Four Israeli strikes hit the Muwasi area in southern Gaza between Rafah and Khan Younis. In northern Gaza, a strike hit an apartment, killing seven people including a mother and five children. Their bodies were taken to Shifa hospital. 'Stand up, my love,' one weeping woman said, touching the shrouded bodies. Israel said it was responding to Hamas' 'barbaric attacks' and dismantling its capabilities. It said it takes all feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm. Staff at Nasser hospital, which received the bodies of six people over the past 24 hours, said they were killed while on their way to get food aid. Much of Gaza's population of over 2 million relies on aid after widespread destruction of agriculture as well as a recent Israeli blockade. Experts have warned of famine. Israel's army has warned that the aid distribution area is an active combat zone during nighttime hours. It said several suspects attempted to approach troops operating in the Tel al-Sultan area overnight 'in a manner that posed a threat.' The army said troops called out, then fired warning shots as the suspects advanced. An army official who couldn't be named in line with military procedures said the shots were fired about a half-mile from the distribution site. Over the past two weeks, shootings have occurred frequently near the new hubs where thousands of desperate Palestinians are being directed to collect food. Witnesses say nearby Israeli troops have opened fire, and more than 80 people have been killed, according to Gaza hospital officials. Israel's military has said it fired warning shots or, in some instances, at individuals approaching. The hubs are run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a new group of mainly American contractors. Israel wants it to replace a system coordinated by the United Nations and aid groups. A GHF spokesperson, speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance with the group's rules, said it didn't feed Gaza residents on Saturday and blamed Hamas threats. There was no immediate Hamas response. Israel accuses Hamas of siphoning off aid under the U.N.-led system. The U.N. and aid groups deny there's significant diversion of aid to fighters and say the new system — which they have rejected — allows Israel to use food as a weapon, violates humanitarian principles and won't be effective. The U.N says it has been unable to distribute much aid under its system because of Israeli military restrictions on movements and insecurity. Separately, Palestinians lined up at a soup kitchen in Gaza City for handouts on the second day of Eid al-Adha. 'I have been standing here for more than an hour and a half. I feel I have a sunstroke, and I am in need,' said Farida al-Sayed, who said she had six people to feed. 'I only had lentils, and I ran out of them.' Hamas-led fighters killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, in the Oct. 7 attack and abducted 251 hostages. Most were released in ceasefire agreements or other deals. Israeli forces have rescued eight living hostages and recovered dozens of bodies. Israel's military campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, according to Gaza's health ministry, which doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants. The offensive has destroyed large parts of Hamas-run Gaza and displaced around 90% of its population of roughly 2 million Palestinians.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store