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Flat White

Mother’s Day tribute

14 May 2023

4:00 AM

14 May 2023

4:00 AM

Leila Abdallah – mother to Liana, Alex, Michael, and Selina, a wife to Danny, and the daughter of Norma Habis and Michel Geagea, has endured more than most women in a lifetime.

On Saturday 1, February 2020, the 32nd day of the year in the Gregorian calendar, the 5th Saturday of 2020, and the 5th week of 2020, Britain officially exited the EU membership, Australian fires continued to threaten New South Wales and Canberra, Australia Open Women’s Tennis was won by 21-year-old American Sofia Kenin, and four innocent and fun-loving kids were walking on the footpath to get ice cream in the family-dominated suburb of Oatlands just 23 kilometres north-west of the Sydney central business district.

On that same day, a 29-year-old driver in a ute was driving erratically and speeding at more than 130km/h in a 50km/h zone when he mounted a kerb and fatally struck Sienna Abdallah, 8, her siblings Angelina, 12, and Antony, 13, and their 11-year-old cousin Veronique Sakr. They all died.

The driver also hit and injured three other children, one of whom sustained permanent brain injuries. The driver blew three times the legal alcohol limit and allegedly had cocaine and party drug MDMA in his system. They pleaded guilty to four counts of manslaughter, and were jailed in April 2021 for 28 years with a non-parole period of 21 years. But in a majority decision handed down in July 2022, the New South Wales Court of criminal appeal concluded the term was excessive. The driver was resentenced to a term of 20 years, with a non-parole period of 15 years.

How should a mother, wife, and daughter react to such a tragedy? For Leila Abdalla, it was simple – she and her husband forgave the driver: ‘I learned to forgive the driver who took three of my children, I didn’t want my three surviving children to grow up angry.’

Born in Lebanon and coming to Australia in 2005, Leila was raised as a Maronite Catholic, and despite the family being ripped apart by such a senseless act, Danny Abdallah said he is proud of his wife, who has championed forgiveness after that tragic fateful day. ‘She is my rock,’ he said.

Both Leila and Danny have somehow managed to forgive the drug-affected driver who cut their children’s lives short. She says it was her Christian upbringing that taught her the importance of forgiving in times of despair and allowed her to forgive the driver.

But, as if losing three of your six children was not enough, the family’s home in Telopea at the time was robbed a year later, and their plans for a memorial garden next to where the accident happened were rejected by Oatlands Golf Club, Leila was still able to hold her faith and to this day, she recalls that in what may be called an epiphany, in a flashing moment, forgiveness came to Leila instinctively, and it’s an act she says that has given her a sense of freedom.


‘Sometimes things happen to remind you how precious life is and how easily it can be taken,’ she told a leading women’s magazine. ‘Let’s live our days with peace and love and with forgiveness.’

It’s difficult not to draw a parallel between what happened to Leila and the biblical Job. In the Book of Job in the Old Testament, Job is a righteous, God-fearing man who experienced severe trials and afflictions. Job lost all his property, his children died, and he suffered great physical agony.

But faced with the appalling loss of his possessions, his children, and finally his own health, Job still refused to curse God and, whilst questioning it, he kept his faith.

Leila kept hers as well.

Danny summed it up by saying: ‘Do I become the “traditional man” and seek revenge, or do I stay as a dad and look at my other kids? I didn’t want to bring anger, resentment, bitterness in my household,’ he said.

Both Leila and Danny truly had the patience of Job and like Job who was rewarded in chapter 42 with a long life, and with seven more sons, and three more daughters, Leila, two years after the tragic loss of three of her six children in that devastating crash, gave birth to their seventh child, a little girl – Selina – a name devised by the eldest daughter Liana as a mix of the two girls Sienna and Angelina.

In an Instagram posting, Leila and Danny Abdallah shared a touching photo writing:

The Abdallah family are proud to announce the birth of our 7th child into our family. Baby Abdallah Born 18th March 2022 at 7:40am, her weight is 3.3 kg, and her height is 51cm. Our little girl is in good health. Antony, Angelina, and Sienna in heaven, Liana, Alex, and Micheal with us. God has answered our prayers The Lord gives, and the Lord takes blessed be the name of the Lord.’

There is no question that the Abdallahs captured the hearts of the Australian people, the nation, and indeed the international media after incredibly forgiving the driver responsible for the deaths of their three children. For Leila, it was forgive not forget.

As the then Chairman of the Mother of the Year Nominations Committee, I recall meeting Leila (and Danny) at their home in April to tell her that she was chosen as the 2021 Mother of The Year. On leaving that meeting, tears were rolling down my eyes as I sat in the car reflecting on the tragedy.

In the footsteps of the award, this incredible couple launched the i4Give foundation in remembrance of their children and as a ‘National Day of Forgiveness’ with an i4Give Day being held on February 1, each year.

And then, if being named Mother of the Year, establishing the i4Give foundation, and giving birth to baby Selina in March was not ‘reward’ enough, Leila (and Danny) was invited to visit the Vatican and meet the Pope to share her story of forgiveness at the 10th World Meeting of Families (WMOF) organised by Vatican Dicastery for the Laity, Family, and Life along with the Diocese of Rome and held from 22-26 June 2022.

With Leila staying behind to care for baby Selina, Danny Abdallah shared their power of forgiveness at the Vatican. In a remarkable acknowledgment of their faith, and in particular Leila’s strength and resilience, Danny relived their devastating story with Pope Francis and the world.

In the suburb of Oatlands, where the most common countries of birth were China 7.3 per cent, South Korea 5.4 per cent, and Lebanon 3.2 per cent, where the most common religion was Catholic 33.2 per cent (2016 Census), there still lives a woman with her family, who is indeed a woman after God’s own heart.

Like King David in the book of Acts, who was called a man after God’s own heart, Leila also had the same absolute faith in God. For Leila it was, and simply is, Fides in Deo!

Greg Bondar. National Director – Christian Voice Australia (CVA). Former Nominating Committee Chairman – 2021 Mother of the Year Awards.

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