HAIFA, ISRAEL — A single moment on Sunday night, April 5, 2026, wiped out two generations of a family when a heavy missile warhead struck a residential building in the heart of Haifa. Among the four fatalities were Lucille Jane Gershovich, a 29-year-old Filipina citizen, and her Israeli husband, Dmitry "Dima" Gershovich, 42. The attack, which occurred during a barrage of Iranian ballistic missiles, also claimed the lives of Dima’s elderly parents, Vladimir Gershovich, 73, and Lena Ostrovsky, 68.
Lucille and Dima had recently celebrated their second wedding anniversary, having married in April 2024. Lucille, a member of the vibrant Filipino Diaspora in Israel, was described by friends as a woman who had "found her home" in Haifa.
In a cruel twist of fate, Dima—an engineer who lived in Herzliya—had only just brought his father, Vladimir, home from a lengthy stay at a Haifa hospital hours before the strike. The family was reportedly together in the apartment to celebrate Vladimir’s recovery when the missile, estimated to carry a 450-kilogram warhead, made a direct hit on their five-story building.
The Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) confirmed Lucille’s identity on Tuesday, expressing "profound sorrow" over the loss.
The Haifa missile strike resulted in four fatalities, including Lucille and Dima, with 11 others injured nearby. Search and rescue teams labored through the night to extract victims from the collapsed structure's rubble. Currently, the Philippine Embassy in Tel Aviv is coordinating with Lucille’s family to arrange the repatriation of her remains.
"Two generations of one family were killed in this attack—a stark reminder of the indiscriminate nature of this conflict," the Israeli Embassy in the Philippines said in a statement of solidarity.
This tragedy marks another somber chapter for the roughly 30,000 Filipinos living in Israel, many of whom serve as caregivers. Lucille's death follows the loss of Mary Anne Velasquez de Vera, another Filipina worker killed by shrapnel in Tel Aviv just last month while shielding her patient.
The President of the Philippines has ordered the Migrant Workers Office to provide full assistance to Lucille's family, while the Filipino community in Haifa has organized small prayer vigils to honor the "gentle soul" who sought a better life abroad, only to have it cut short by the tremors of war.

