
📌 Key Points
- Celina Jaitly is embroiled in a divorce and custody battle with her husband, Austrian hotelier Peter Haag.
- She reacted to the Twisha Sharma death case, emphasizing that marriage isn’t always ‘happily ever after’.
- Celina highlighted silent forms of abuse, including isolation, emotional manipulation, and being cut off from support.
- She urged parents and friends to support daughters reaching out for help from abusive situations.
Actor Celina Jaitly has voiced her profound sorrow and concern following the tragic death of Twisha Sharma. Drawing from her own personal battles, Jaitly powerfully asserts that marriage is not always a ‘happily ever after,’ highlighting the frightening reality of hidden abuse many women endure.
Celina Jaitly’s Personal Struggles Revealed
Over the last few months, actor Celina Jaitly has been making headlines for many personal battles. The actor is embroiled in a divorce battle with her husband, Austrian hotelier Peter Haag . A few days ago, she shared how, despite joint custody arrangements and subsisting orders of the Austrian Family Court, she is denied communication with her children.
For the last few days, the Twisha Sharma death case has sent shockwaves across the nation. The 33-year-old woman was found dead at her home in Bhopal. Her family has accused her husband and mother-in-law of dowry harassment and abetment to suicide. Celina has now reacted on the case and shared how marriage is not always ‘happily ever after’.
Twisha Sharma Case: A Frightening Reality
She added, “Because this is the frightening reality of abuse. Sometimes the suffering of women becomes so normalised that their pain slowly stops mattering to the people around them. Marriage is not always happily ever after. Sometimes the loneliest form of violence is the one nobody sees. Abuse besides bruises. Sometimes it is isolation. Sometimes, it is slowly being cut off from your world. Sometimes it is living in a foreign place with no family, no support system, nowhere to go. Sometimes it is being made to feel that you are the problem, that your pain is an inconvenience. Sometimes it is humiliation behind closed doors while the world believes you are living a beautiful life.”
“You begin convincing yourself that surviving is the same thing as living like me in the above picture.. My heart goes out to Twisha Sharma’s family, & to every woman suffering behind closed doors. Parents, friends, & family, if your daughter reaches out to you, bring her back. Do not let the abuse consume her,” she concluded.
The Unseen Violence in Marriage
In November last year, Celina filed a case against her husband, Peter Haag, accusing him of domestic violence, cruelty and manipulation, and sought ₹ 50 crore in compensation. Celina has been open about the emotional turmoil of staying away from her two boys, Winston and Viraaj.
Meanwhile, on Sunday, the last rites of Twisha Sharma were conducted 12 days after her death, following the second postmortem of her body conducted by a team of AIIMS Delhi on a high court order.
Celina Jaitly’s poignant message underscores the critical need to recognize and address the silent suffering within marriages. Her call to action for families to support their loved ones in abusive situations resonates deeply, urging vigilance against unseen violence.


