“We also saw the tattoos on her hands,” he said on Saturday. “Now she will have her own place next to us and we can go there whenever we want. And she can rest.”
He said the funeral will be held on Sunday, which is Ricarda Louk’s birthday.
“I think Shani said ‘Let’s give my mother a birthday present and let’s go back and be close to her’,” he added.
Having Shani’s grave nearby would be a comfort, said Ricarda Louk.
“Maybe we’ll find more peace,” she said.
Nissim Louk said there was also solace in knowing Shani was doing what she loved best before she died and probably did not suffer.
‘She was so happy’
She was pronounced dead by Israeli authorities at the end of October, based on findings in the area of the Nova rave, where more than 360 people were shot, bludgeoned or burned to death.
Videos of a smiling Shani at the party, before the attack, surfaced in the following weeks.
“She was dancing the whole night. She was so happy,” Nissim Louk said. “She never thought that there is evil in the world because she was a free spirit. She saw it only for a couple of seconds.”
Around 1,200 people were killed and more than 250 abducted in the Hamas-led attack, according to Israeli tallies. Israel responded by launching a military offensive to try to eradicate Hamas which is now in its eighth month.
More than 35,000 people have since been killed in Gaza, the Palestinian health ministry says. Most of the coastal enclave’s population has been displaced and much of it has been laid to waste in the offensive, which has drawn fierce criticism abroad.
Ricarda Louk said she was pained by what she sees as ignorance and misinformation displayed at some U.S. campus protests against Israel’s war in Gaza.
“It’s horrible for us to see,” she said. “We can tell you from our own experience. We lost our daughter in this massacre.”
“There is no resistance that can justify what happened here,” she said.