Hawzah News Agency- Sayyed Jawad described the moment he learned of his father’s martyrdom as “pure shock,” noting that the family had been somewhat prepared given prior events. Due to the divided nature of his father’s protection detail, the news was carefully verified and communicated only after his body had been formally identified.
Recalling his last meeting with Sayyed Hassan in June 2024, Sayyed Jawad said their conversations were personal, reflective, and centered on family memories. He noted that his father had likely anticipated his martyrdom a year earlier, quietly preparing his children without burdening them with grief.
Describing his father’s early life, Sayyed Jawad highlighted Sayyed Hassan’s modest upbringing, including childhood games of football with numbers painted on plain shirts, which shaped his empathy for the marginalized and poor. He emphasized that this foundation influenced Sayyed Hassan’s lifelong connection to ordinary people.
Sayyed Jawad portrayed his father as a deeply studious and intellectual figure, who read at least one book every two days and engaged with diverse literature, including political memoirs and works on global security strategies. He encouraged critical dialogue, consultation, and the pursuit of knowledge without limits.
On the personal front, Sayyed Jawad described Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah as a “very open-minded” and people-oriented father and husband. He emphasized kindness, decisiveness, and moral clarity as defining traits, noting that his father guided him in selecting books and encouraged reading the Quran and Imam Khomeini’s Forty Hadiths.
Speaking of his father’s emotions, Sayyed Jawad said that while Sayyed Hassan rarely showed grief publicly, he privately mourned his brother’s martyrdom and openly expressed compassion for the families of other martyrs. In his marriage, he embodied the highest standards of respect, courtesy, and support for his wife.
Sayyed Jawad highlighted his father’s greatest aspiration: the liberation of Quds. He described Sayyed Hassan as a “complete nationalist,” for whom personal sacrifices—including life, property, and family—were inseparable from the pursuit of justice and the Palestinian cause.
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