Happiness cut down: Newlyweds' family mourns loss after Lahore tragedy
Lahore, Pakistan (CNN)For
so many, it was supposed to be a pleasant day out; among the Christian
visitors, a fun way to celebrate Easter Sunday. But a day in the park turned into tragedy for the families of the 74 lives brutally cut short in Lahore's Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park last weekend.
Seventeen
of those killed were minors, Haider Ashraf, the deputy inspector
general of police for the Pakistani city, told CNN. Almost 370 others
were wounded.
Jamat-ul-Ahrar, the group that claimed
responsibility, said it was specifically targeting Christians on the
holy day, and has vowed more such attacks.
The
attack came at a poignant time for the country's Christian minority,
some of whom were in the city's Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park to celebrate Easter
on Sunday evening.
But not all
the victims were Christians -- the simple fact is that families from
across the city come to use this park, and the majority of the victims
in Sunday's horrific attack were Muslim.
Near a makeshift memorial in the park, a
sign, stark white capital letters on a black background, proclaimed
what so many in this city think: "Terrorism has no religion."
Among the victims: a young Muslim couple, married just four months.
Overtaken by grief
Naveed
Ashraf's mother was beside herself with loss. Her son has married just
months before, and the newlyweds -- both Muslim -- were visiting the
park with two of Naveed's sisters.
"I entrusted them in God's hands, now they are with God," she said.
It
was the first time his new wife, Shawana, had visited the popular spot
in Lahore, one of Pakistan's most moderate, cosmopolitan cities.
They
both died in the bombing, suffering shrapnel wounds to the head and
neck that poured blood, soaking their clothes, hair and faces.
They
were buried as soon as possible under Muslim law -- first thing Monday
morning. One of Naveed's sisters was also injured in the bombing -- a
shrapnel wound in her leg.
"Everyone
who saw (Shawana) said 'she looks like an angel,''' Naveed's mother
told CNN. "Well, God made an angel come and take my son away."
Moment of innocence before tragedy strikes
Moments
before the attack, video was taken of the Ashraf family. They were
sitting having snacks close to a food stand when the bombers struck.
In
the aftermath, the family searched for them at the park. They found
them, broken and bloodied, at the city's Sheikh Zayed Hospital. On the
way there they had helped other victims, one family in a stream of
volunteers loading the injured into cars, on to motorbikes, anything
that could carry them.
The sisters
were covered in cloth lying side by side. One had been helped there by
strangers, two men that carried her listless body -- men she now calls
"brothers."
Despite her own injuries, her sister had searched for help to get her brother to hospital.
"Oh
my lion son! I might as well be dead! I don't want to act like this,
but I can help it. He was my lion, my big, strong son. Oh, my son was
soaked in blood," his mother cried.
"If
I could I would swap places with them. I wish I could give all my years
to my children," she said, sobs wracking her body. Her husband,
Naveed's father, sat next to her, mute in his own grief.
"All I wanted to do was hold my son and daughter in law close like this," she added, wrapping her arms around herself, tightly.
"How could they betray me like this? They took them away in coffins."
The area around the park remains closed,
a crime scene. You can see the dark black soot, the scars of where one
unidentified suicide bomber carried out this attack. The blackened soil
is next to a children's ride.
The
perpetrator of this horrific, senseless act likely perished in the
flames alongside his scores of victims. He leaves behind, among
countless others, a family who say a darkness has befallen them.
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