Hasti (Hajar) Mohammadi: She had only gone to Evin to provide financial assistance to prisoners when she was killed!
Hasti Mohammadi, whose legal name was Hajar, was known to those around her not only for her kindness but also for her quiet and steady way of life. On the day of the Israeli airstrike, she had gone to Evin Prison on behalf of the Diyah Fund, a charity that helps release prisoners who are unable to pay the Diyah. Hasti was there to help release several of these people. She was killed in the bombing.
In one of the most brutal attacks of the war, Israeli airstrikes targeted the visiting section of Evin Prison. The attack killed 71 civilians—ordinary people: family members, lawyers, and volunteers like Hasti. Her lifeless body was pulled from the rubble two days later. According to the Hem Mihan media group, the grief at her funeral was heavy. Her family—broken and in disbelief—surrounded her grave in a wave of sorrow. Her young niece wept uncontrollably, shouting: “Beautiful aunt!” “My beautiful aunt!” The wedding tray—the blood settlement—was brought for the celebration and now you will never see it again. The women around her grave wailed. Her sister cried out in grief: “She only went to help—and now she is buried here.” Hasti did not carry a weapon. She carried hope. She was killed under the rubble of the Israeli bombing of the prison, among the most defenseless people in the war.