Mohamed Hadid's heartbreak for Palestine echoes after deadly Israeli strike on Gaza Hospital

The real-estate mogul turned his feed into something raw and urgent; opening with grief for Palestine and echoing a heartbreak that reaches far beyond social media.

NUR ADNIN MAHALIM
27 Aug 2025 04:35pm
Mohamed Hadid express his mourning towards Gaza on Instagram. - Photo: Mohamed Hadid Instagram
Mohamed Hadid express his mourning towards Gaza on Instagram. - Photo: Mohamed Hadid Instagram

SHAH ALAM - Scrolling through Mohamed Hadid’s Instagram usually feels like basking in luxe Los Angeles sunsets or model-offspring snapshots.

But yesterday, the real-estate mogul turned his feed into something raw and urgent; opening with grief for Palestine and echoing a heartbreak that reaches far beyond social media.

A Palestinian man reacts to the destruction after an overnight strike on the Sheikh Radwan Health Centre in the north of Gaza City on Aug 6, 2025. (Photo by Omar AL-QATTAA / AFP)
A Palestinian man reacts to the destruction after an overnight strike on the Sheikh Radwan Health Centre in the north of Gaza City on Aug 6, 2025. (Photo by Omar AL-QATTAA / AFP)

In his post, Hadid wrote with unfiltered grief, stating that his eyes could not lie and that he felt sadness all day and all night for his people in Palestine.

He questioned how people could be so evil and asserted that neither man nor God could forgive them. 

“My eyes can't lie. I feel sadness all day and all night for my people in Palestine.

"How can people be so evil to do what they do? Neither man nor God can forgive them. That's why God throws them out of every single place.

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"He gives them other chances in other places to be taken in, but yet they forget all the evil they have done around the world. I know you know what I'm talking about. Call them by name. Call them by name. Anyone who double-taps this post isn't doing it for performance, it is personal," he said.

World leaders and journalist organisations have condemned an Israeli strike on Monday that targeted Gaza’s Nasser Hospital and killed at least 21 people, including five journalists working for Reuters, the Associated Press, Al Jazeera and other outlets.

The attack on the medical complex reportedly involved an Israeli explosive drone strike, followed by an airstrike as wounded civilians were being evacuated.

The assault drew widespread condemnation, fueling international anger over Israel’s repeated targeting of civilians and intensifying frustration at the failure of the international community to hold Israel accountable for attacks on the press.

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