Home west asia Lebanon Slain Hezbollah Chief’s Son Says His Father Spent Final Days In Rage

Slain Hezbollah Chief’s Son Says His Father Spent Final Days In Rage

The pager blasts and Nasrallah’s September 2024 killing in an Israeli airstrike marked the start of an assault that killed over 4,000 Lebanese and devastated the south.
Jawad Nasrallah, son of late Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, sits at the burial site ahead of the first anniversary of his father's assassination, on the outskirts of Beirut, Lebanon, September 24, 2025. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah’s son said his father was gripped by rage this time last year after Israel detonated pagers worn by his fighters across Lebanon; just days later, Israel assassinated him.

The pager explosions and Nasrallah’s killing in an Israeli air attack on the southern suburbs of Beirut in September 2024 turned out to be the opening salvos of an Israeli assault that killed more than 4,000 people across Lebanon and destroyed swathes of the country’s south.

The war, which Israel said it conducted to end Hezbollah’s cross-border attacks in support of its ally Hamas in Gaza, shook Hezbollah’s hold on power in Lebanon, where the group is now under pressure to give up its arms.

Those developments were unimaginable a year ago when Hezbollah’s then-leader was confronted with the major intelligence breach in the communication devices that killed dozens of the group’s members and maimed thousands of others.

“He was upset, angry, resentful – there was a lot of resentment and thinking, ‘How could this happen?’ He considered himself entrusted with those lives,” Jawad Nasrallah, Nasrallah’s second-oldest son, told Reuters in an interview at his father’s grave.

Security was tight around Nasrallah at the time. Jawad, like more than a million Lebanese, had been displaced by Israeli air strikes and had not seen his father for three months.

“You can say we took it day by day. Nothing was certain,” Jawad said.

‘Shocking’

Nasrallah’s last televised speech was on September 19. Eight days later, a string of Israeli bunker-busting bombs on a Hezbollah complex in Beirut’s southern suburbs killed Nasrallah, who had led the powerful Shi’ite religious, political and military group for more than 30 years.

“We found out on the news like everyone else. It was shocking, but we couldn’t cry – no one in the house could scream or express their feelings,” Jawad said, explaining that other tenants in the apartment building where they were temporarily staying were unaware of their links to the Hezbollah leader.

At the time, Israeli strikes targeted displaced Shi’ite Muslims dozens of kilometres from Lebanon’s southern border, raising the spectre of civil war as Sunni or Christian towns regarded fleeing Shi’ite Muslims with open suspicion.

“We felt a moment of alienation like everyone else, in addition to the horrors of that time, which was terrible for everyone: war, bombing, brutality – and on top of that, alienation,” Jawad said.

With Israel escalating strikes across Lebanon and sending ground troops into its south, Nasrallah’s body could not be moved into a morgue for several days before a temporary burial. A formal ceremony was held months later during a truce.

The war with Israel that left Hezbollah badly weakened was followed by the toppling of the group’s Syrian ally, Bashar al-Assad, and a new government in Lebanon that has pledged to enforce a state monopoly on all arms.

Hezbollah has refused to give up its arsenal – a stance that Jawad, a businessman with no formal position in the group but who is sanctioned by the U.S., reiterated.

“Never in your fantasies or dreams,” he said, adding that he still asks his father for guidance.

“I ask him to solve some dilemmas. I tell him: ‘You have to solve this problem for us and help me with it,'” he said.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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