Her sister Yuval was choked with tears as she delivered a heart-breaking eulogy.
She said: “I love you. I’m glad at least you’re here. I will bring my grandchildren; I will bring the family.
“I won’t give up on you, everyone will know about Noa Marciano.”
In the moshav of Olesh to the west, another grief-stricken Israeli family are preparing to bury their grandmother this weekend.
Yehudit Weiss was also found dead by the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) near al Shifa. She had been taken hostage during Hamas’s initial attack, when her husband Shmulik was killed.
Her son Omer recalled the family’s double heartbreak at being told first about his father’s death, then his mother’s.
“It broke us the first time when they told us about my father and the next time it tore us apart, we didn’t know how to deal with it.
Like the relatives of some 240 hostages, they hoped for a breakthrough that would bring their grandmother home.
But the waiting and the uncertainty, he said, have been unbearable.
“It’s unbelievable pain. Every day passes, every hour, every minute, and we don’t have information,” he added.
“We buried our father, and we weren’t able to mourn. We kept ourselves busy, and we did everything we could to bring my mother home.”
In Gaza itself, another family are also preparing to bury relatives. Eleven of them.
The Tabatibi family lost that many in multiple Israeli airstrikes in Khan Younis in the Gaza Strip.
Alaa Abu Hasira said they were among the thousands of people who have travelled south from northern Gaza, after being told they would be safer there by the Israelis.
“We were in Gaza City, and as a result of the conflict we moved to Khan Younis. All my sisters died, and my son and daughter also. I wish I had taken my daughter in my arms, and my twin sister also died,” she said.
Others in Gaza were buried alive today.
Israeli airstrikes in Nusseirat have left dozens under the rubble of residential blocks which collapsed in the bombardment.
A Friday of death and burials, ending a sixth week of this devastating war.
Among those attending the service in the city’s cathedral was Chancellor Olaf Scholz, interior minister Nancy Faeser and German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.
In a post on X, Mr Scholz described it as a “moving moment of compassion and solidarity for a deeply affected city”.
“The whole of Germany stands in these dark hours with the people of Magdeburg,” he wrote.
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He has been named by German media as Taleb A, with his surname being withheld in line with privacy laws, although the name has not been confirmed by German authorities.
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2:24
What do we know about ‘Taleb A’?
Saudi suspect being held
The suspect is a 50-year-old Saudi citizen who worked as a doctor and arrived in Germany in 2006, premier of Saxony-Anhalt state Reiner Haseloff said.
Taleb A is being investigated for five counts of suspected murder and 205 counts of suspected attempted murder, prosecutor Horst Walter Nopens said.
The motive for the atrocity is not yet known.
Investigators are looking into whether the attack could have been motivated by the suspect’s dissatisfaction with how Germany treats Saudi refugees, Mr Nopens added.
Interior minister Nancy Faeser told reporters it was “clear” the suspect was “Islamophobic”.
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1:46
German police detain suspect
Residents in Magdeburg told Sky’s Europe correspondent Siobhan Robbins they are “shocked” and “traumatised” by the attack.
One woman said she “can’t find words to describe how traumatised we are”.
“We need a lot of time to process what happened,” she said.
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2:46
Magdeburg attack: A timeline of what happened
‘Show solidarity’
She added she wanted to attend the memorial service to “show solidarity” with others in the city and “feel collective support”.
“In such a tragedy the only thing that can help us to absorb and to process everything is to be around each other and to show our solidarity, not just with words but actions.”
Narrow escape
Andrea Reis, 57, and her daughter Julia, 34, had been at the market on Friday evening and had a narrow escape.
They could have been in the path of the car but Julia had wanted to keep walking around the market rather than stop to eat.
Andrea said: “It was the terrible sounds, children calling ‘mama, papa’, ‘help me’ – they’re going round in my head now.”
Although many people went to the site on Saturday with candles to mourn the victims, several hundred far-right protesters gathered in a central square in Magdeburg with a banner that read “remigration”, reported news agency dpa.
The suspect in the attack on the Christmas market in Magdeburg appeared to be dissatisfied with the treatment of Saudi refugees in Germany, a prosecutor has said.
Five people have died so far – including a nine-year-old child and four adults – with at least 200 more injured, according to authorities. Of those injured, 41 are said to be seriously hurt.
The suspect – who was arrested at the scene – was a 50-year-old Saudi citizen who worked as a doctor and arrived in Germany in 2006, premier of Saxony-Anhalt state Reiner Haseloff said.
He has been named as Taleb A in German media.
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2:46
Magdeburg attack: A timeline of what happened
Police director Tom-Oliver Langhans told a news conference on Saturday the attack had left the city “very alarmed”.
He added that officers arrested the suspect three minutes after the first emergency calls were made from the market.
Prosecutor Horst Walter Nopens said the motive behind the attack appeared to be “dissatisfaction with the treatment of refugees from Saudi Arabia and how they are being treated in Germany”.
German interior minister Nancy Faeser has said the suspect was Islamophobic.
The suspect has described himself as an “ex-Muslim” who sought asylum after receiving death threats for denouncing his faith.
His social media pages, which he posted on in the hours leading up to the attack, promote anti-Islam views – and claim Germany is allowing the “Islamisation of Europe”.
The suspect, who says he works as a psychiatrist at a government hospital, has appeared in various media reports about his efforts to help other former Muslims flee Saudi Arabia and other Gulf nations.
Tamara Zieschang, the state’s interior minister, told reporters the suspect had been practising medicine in Bernburg, around 25 miles south of Magdeburg.
He has a website that he told the BBC in 2019 has helped “hundreds of people” seek asylum overseas.
The homepage reads: “My advice: do not seek asylum in Germany.”
In videos with voiceovers in English, he claims he is being pursued by German police, who “sent someone carrying a knife to steal a USB stick from my mailbox”.
Tweets supporting Elon Musk and Tommy Robinson
Another tweet criticises a commentator for saying X owner Elon Musk and far-right activist Tommy Robinson should be arrested.
He claims they “cited Germany as a shining example of media censorship”, and adds: “My experience in Germany leaves no doubt – they actually censor victims.”
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German terrorist expert Professor Peter Neumann described the suspect’s profile as unusual.
He says he “loves the AfD [Alternative for Germany] and wants to punish Germany for tolerance towards Islamists”, the director of King’s College London’s International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation wrote on X.
Professor Neumann said: “After 25 years in this ‘business’ you think nothing could surprise you anymore… that really wasn’t on my radar.”
The doors of the white van are thrown open. Dozens of armed French police jump on board, their colleagues on the ground form a human chain and get to work.
The van is carrying precious cargo. Water. Small plastic bottles stacked roof high and van deep.
It’s chaotic.
Orders are being shouted in French and Chimaore, the language spoken by Mayotte’s African community.
Security is high. The gendarmes are backed up by armed local police.
Local residents are angry. That anger could easily turn to violence.
It’s why a 10pm curfew remains in place across the island. One resident described the situation as “volcanic”.
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3:05
Short supply of aid after Cyclone Chido
Cyclone Chido tore through Mayotte on Sunday, but this is the first water delivery Ouangani has received since Saturday.
Nobody understands why.
‘There’s no word and no one has water’
Arriving at the distribution centre just after the water is loaded on to another van for delivery to nearby villages is Ouangani’s mayor, a young, former English teacher who speaks multiple languages.
He is considered and thoughtful when describing the situation facing his country.
“It’s not sufficient,” he tells me. “There’s no word and no one has water.”
“The authorities weren’t prepared,” he adds. “There’s not only a water problem, it’s food, electricity. Nothing on the island has been done.”
He then delivers a dire warning of “people starving”.
I ask him who he thinks is to blame? He says that everyone is responsible.
“I cannot imagine that with all the means we have with technology, that they couldn’t have seen this coming,” he says.
But this region is not remote. It’s only an hour-long drive south of the capital on one winding road.
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1:13
Macron met with anger in Mayotte
This van load of water is supposed to serve between three to five villages in the area.
That’s a population of anywhere between six and 12,000 people. Nobody knows for sure because of the problem with undocumented migrants.
We follow the van to the first drop-off.
The vehicle pulls up and drops off 10 to 20 crates of half-litre plastic bottles. Each crate has 12 small bottles. People have been waiting. They’re mostly women. Each one grabs a pack and disappears.
Within minutes it’s all gone.
Some more people show up seconds later. Their anger at missing out is obvious. “What’s the point?!” a man shouts.
‘It’ll only last about one or two hours’
Fundi has been lucky enough to get some water.
“We only just received aid now, I really don’t think that’s good enough,” she says.
They were just outside when they saw the van arrive with the water. Pure luck.
“Usually communication is good, but I don’t know why they came unannounced like that today,” she says.
But it’s not enough, Fundi explains: “Twelve bottles of water that are only 500ml, for a family? That’s really very little, it’ll only last about one to two hours.”
It’s no wonder, Fundi has a family of seven living under one roof.