When Emad Jawad dropped his wife and son at a bustling Baghdad market on the eve of the Eid al-Adha festival, he couldn’t know he would never see them alive again.
Within half an hour, an Islamic State group suicide bomber detonated an explosives vest there, killing at least 36 people in one of Iraq’s deadliest such attacks in years.
The bloody carnage Monday evening claimed the lives of mostly women and children, including a four-month-old baby, maimed dozens more, and left the war-scarred nation revulsed and bewildered.
The day after, as Muslims marked the Festival of Sacrifice, the devastated father was mourning the violent loss of his loved ones.
“They were so pure, only God knows,” said an inconsolable Jawad, dressed in a black tunic, of his wife Hoda, 25, and their eight-year-old son Kayan.
“They will never be replaced, neither him nor his mother.”
Another 60 people were wounded at the Al-Woheilat market in the capital’s sprawling and poor, mostly Shiite district of Sadr City.
Receiving mourners in a funeral tent, the distraught Jawad, a 41-year-old police officer, recounted the day that changed his life forever.
“I’m the one who dropped them off at around 5:30 pm, and the explosion happened at around 6:00 pm,” he told AFP.
“I rushed to the market, searching for them. Then I headed to the hospital and shouted at the morgue workers if Kayan was there, but they didn’t know his name. How could they?
“But because he was so strikingly beautiful, I asked if there was a blond boy inside. Sadly, they said yes.”
Sitting silently nearby at the funeral was a boy wearing a black baseball cap, Kayan’s brother Ali, fighting back tears.
He shot glances at his father as the bereaved man described washing Kayan’s corpse, disfigured by shrapnel, and the bloodied remains of his wife, for the burial.
Kayan’s grandfather showed photos of his beloved grandchild on his mobile phone.
“We bought him Eid clothes so he could be buried in them,” the old man said.
Leave a Comment