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Australian Police Raid Bondi Beach Terrorist’s Home
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IDF Eliminates 40 Hezbollah Terrorists in Southern Lebanon Since October
Trump Urges Jewish Americans to Stay Proud After Australia Terror Attack
Rav Yitzchok Dovid Gurwicz z”l
It is with great sadness that Matzav.comreports the passing of Rav Yitzchok Dovid Gurwicz z”l. He was 90.
Rav Gurwicz was born in England and was the eldest son of Rav Aryeh Leib Gurwicz zt”l, rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Bais Yosef in Gateshead, and his mother, Mrs. Chana Liba a”h, daughter of the renowned mashgiach Rav Eliyahu Lopian zt”l.
He was a brother of Hagaon Rav Avraham Gurwicz shlit”a.
His father, Rav Aryeh Leib, served as rosh yeshiva of Gateshead for more than three decades and authored the sefarim Arza D’bei Rav, Roshei She’arim, and Me’orei She’arim. Rav Gurwicz’s mother passed away in 1978 following a stroke and was buried on Har HaZeisim.
Rav Yitzchok Dovid resided in Gateshead near his brother, the current rosh yeshiva, one of the gedolei hador, Rav Avraham Gurwicz, with whom he shared a deep and enduring bond of closeness and affection throughout their lives.
Alongside his professional responsibilities, Rav Gurwicz was exceptional in his dedication to kevius ittim laTorah.
At the levayah of his wife, who passed away approximately seven years ago, Rav Avraham Gurwicz testified that “the nifteres merited to be an eishes chaver, for my brother Rav Yitzchok Dovid made Torah his occupation and it was the center of his life.”
Each year, during the European vacation period toward the end of the civil year, Rav Gurwicz traveled to participate in the Yarchei Kallah of Agudas Yisroel of Europe. He maintained a close relationship with the Ponovezh rosh yeshiva Rav Berel Povarsky.
Rav Yitzchok Dovid leaves behind a wonderful family, including sons and sons-in-law who are distinguished talmidei chachamim.
The levayah is taking place today from the main shul of the Gateshead community in England, after which the aron will be brought to Eretz Yisroel for burial.
Yehi zichro boruch.
{Matzav.com}
Hagaon HaRav Moshe Hillel Hirsch Lights Menorah on First Night of Chanukah
Tens of Thousands of Shekels Per Prisoner: Three Yungeleit Receive Cash Gifts After Military Detention
A public recognition ceremony was held in Yerushalayim honoring three yungeleit who were arrested, declared draft evaders, and incarcerated for extended periods in an Israeli military prison.
At the event, the three received cash grants calculated at 1,000 shekels for each day they spent in custody.
The gathering took place at the Beis Medrash Shaarei Tuvia, the bais medrash formerly led by the late Gaavad of Yerushalayim, Rav Yitzchak Tuvia Weiss.
The case dates back to Tammuz, when the three were arrested during protests in the city of Yehud against alleged desecration of graves. After their arrest by police, they were transferred to military police custody due to their failure to report to draft offices.
The three detainees were identified as Elazar Tzadok Kaufman, Aryeh Mordechai Rabinowitz, and Dovid Menachem Mintzberg. All three were incarcerated in a military prison for significant periods of time.
Associates of the detainees said that throughout their imprisonment, the three were held in complete isolation after refusing to wear military uniforms, a stance they said reflected unwavering adherence to their principles.
The last of the three, Elazar Tzadok Kaufman, was released approximately two weeks ago after spending more than 130 days in prison. Prior to his release, Aryeh Mordechai Rabinowitz was freed after more than 90 days of incarceration, while Dovid Menachem Mintzberg was released after more than 30 days in custody.
At the center of the ceremony, the three received what organizers described as significant financial presents, presented “as an expression of appreciation for their steadfast resolve and inner strength.” Donors from around the world contributed to the effort, pledging 1,000 shekels for each day an individual spent in military detention.
As a result, Kaufman received 130,000 shekels, Rabinowitz received 90,000 shekels, and Mintzberg received 30,000 shekels. The funds were distributed in cash, in U.S. dollar bills.
Among the rabbonim who attended and addressed the gathering were Rav Yehoshua Dovid Turtchin; the Rebbe of Mishkenos HaRo’im; Rav Chaim Tzvi Teitelbaum, Av Beis Din of Satmar Yerushalayim; the Krechnif-Sigheter Rebbe; Rav Nesanel Peretz Meirzan, rosh yeshiva of Chochmas HaTorah; Rav Shlomo Zalman Weiss, rav of the Shaarei Tuvia Beis Medrash, and others.
{Matzav.com}
Jewish Activist In Sydney: “I Saw Children Falling, Scenes I Haven’t Seen Since Oct. 7”
Adams Warns of ‘Dark Days’ Ahead Under Mamdani’s NYC Leadership
As he readies himself to leave City Hall, outgoing New York City Mayor Eric Adams is warning that the city could be headed in a troubling direction under Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, telling the New York Post that residents should be deeply concerned about what may come next.
Looking back on the tight mayoral race, Adams argued that the election was far from a blowout, despite how it has been portrayed. He said he believes the outcome might have been different under other circumstances. “I think I would have won if they would have dropped out. Remember 49% of New Yorkers did not vote for Zohran – 49%. But people want to make it seem like there was some landslide. No, it was not. In fact, it was to the contrary. This was a very close race.” Adams ultimately withdrew from the contest after running as an independent and later endorsed former Governor Andrew Cuomo.
Adams also pushed back strongly against claims that allegations of corruption overshadowed his administration. “I don’t think I was treated fairly. In fact, I was treated unfairly. And despite all the noise that we received and all we went through, we did not stop delivering for New Yorkers,” he said.
Turning to public safety and mental health, Adams said he fears progress made during his tenure could be undone. Asked whether he still believed difficult times lay ahead, he responded bluntly. “Yes I do,” Adams said when asked if he still believed “dark days” were ahead. “I think we should be concerned and we are seeing some early indicators. Look, a large number of people who live on our streets deal with mental health illness. We should not be allowing them to live on our streets. We want to bring on 5,000 new police officers to make sure [cop retirements] don’t hurt our law enforcement. We have figured out a successful methodology of making our cities safe. We should not tamper with that at all. Looking to disband [the NYPD’s Strategic Response Group]. That’s the same unit that [responded to a deadly mass shooting in July at NFL HQ in Manhattan].”
He expanded on those concerns by urging Mamdani to reconsider policies associated with the Democratic Socialist Party, warning they could have serious consequences for neighborhoods across the city. “I think New Yorkers need to be alarmed, and I’m hoping that when the mayor-elect becomes mayor he will rethink some of the Democratic Socialist Party’s ideas and policies and see that they’re harmful to New Yorkers. Removing 3,000 inmates from Rikers Island – that is a real issue because they’re going to go back into the communities that they exploited and they preyed on.”
Adams also weighed in on Mamdani’s ability to govern a politically divided city and stressed the importance of cooperation with President Trump following the mayor-elect’s recent visit to the White House. “Let’s be clear: almost half New Yorkers did not vote for Zohran. We’re not going to be able to function in the city if those 49% everyday walk around and say, ‘He’s not [my] mayor.’ That mindset is not helpful to the city, and that’s the same for those who didn’t vote for President Trump. You cannot have four more years of saying the president is not their president. It’s time for us to be politically mature enough and respect our democratic process. So I’m hoping they can work together. There’s some real challenges in front of us. Zohran is going to be able to use all the money in his budget and not deal with asylum seekers because President Trump secured our border, so he should be thankful for that. But I think that it is imperative for him to know that just as he wants people to respect him as a mayor, he has to respect the president as the president.”
Addressing anxiety within the Jewish community, Adams said strong and unambiguous leadership will be required from the next mayor. “There needs to be a clear denouncement of ‘globalize the intifada.’ There needs to be a clear denouncement of people standing in front of a house of worship and calling for harm to a particular group. A mayor must not only lead based on what they say, but what they do. He has to send a very clear message that antisemitism and hate of any faith will not have a place in the city.”
Reflecting on his own departure from office, Adams said he feels no nostalgia for the role, describing the job as relentless. “Actually, I’m not going to miss it (laughing). This is a hard job. I’ve been doing 12-hour days, almost seven days a week. You know, the constant critique and criticism. I would love to have finished the things we’ve done for four more years, but trust me, it’s time for me do something else with my life and use experiences that I had as a police officer, as a lawmaker, as the [borough president] in Brooklyn, and now as the mayor to go and help the city more. There’s more I want to do in the city, particularly going after some of the hate we’re seeing, but also, there are other cities across the country and the globe that I could use my expertise in. And so I don’t look in the rearview mirror. I look in the front windshield.”
Despite stepping away, Adams made clear he is not ruling out future roles in public life. “Never say never. Don’t close the door because then it’s difficult when you have to walk through it again.” Asked specifically about serving in a presidential administration, he added, “Again, you never say never. I am looking forward to all the opportunities that are in front of me.”
Finally, Adams dismissed second-guessing about bypassing the Democratic primary, saying he stands by his decision. “I have no regrets at all. I said I would sit out the Democratic primary and I would run head to head with Zohran Mamdani [as an independent]. You can’t really look back and cry over spilt milk. There’s a whole lot of milk cartons waiting for me to open.”
{Matzav.com}
Outrage at University of Arkansas After Professor Praises Iran’s Ayatollah and Attacks Israel
Controversy is mounting at the University of Arkansas after allegations surfaced that a senior professor used official university letterhead to defend an Iranian regime figure convicted of mass executions and publicly praised Iran’s Supreme Leader while denouncing Israel, according to a report by The New York Post.
The professor, Shirin Saeidi, who until recently headed the university’s Middle East Studies program, was removed from her role as director on Friday. University officials confirmed she remains on staff as a professor while an internal review continues.
The accusations stem in part from a letter Saeidi allegedly wrote on official university stationery calling for the release of Hamid Nouri, a former Iranian official convicted by a Swedish court in 2022 for ordering the execution of thousands of political prisoners at Tehran’s Gohardasht Prison in 1988. The document was obtained by the US-based Alliance Against Islamic Regime of Iran Apologists, which shared it with The Post.
Nouri, who served as assistant deputy prosecutor at Karaj Prison near Tehran, was freed last year as part of a prisoner exchange between Iran and Sweden.
Saeidi has also drawn scrutiny for her social media activity. In posts shared on X in November, she praised Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, writing prayers for his safety and describing him as “the leader who kept Iran intact during the Israeli attack, May god protect you,” in reference to the Hamas-led assault on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. She has additionally referred to Israel as a “terrorist state” and a “genocidal state” in other posts.
The controversy has prompted strong reactions from public officials and advocacy groups. On Friday, US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee sharply criticized Saeidi in a statement to The Post, condemning what he called her “hate-filled antisemitic venom.”
“Whether Shirin Saeidi should be fired is a decision for the administration and the UA board. But praising the Iranian leader — who calls not only for the slaughter of Jews but also calls for the destruction of America — makes me think this deranged professor would probably be better suited to being given a one-way ticket to Tehran and taking a job of teaching in their hate-infested schools,” Huckabee said.
A university spokesman told The Post that Saeidi is no longer affiliated with the Middle East Studies department and that the school is investigating her apparent use of official letterhead “in accordance with university policies.”
Pressure on the university has been building for months. Prior to her removal as director, AAIRIA activists gathered 3,782 signatures on a Change.org petition demanding disciplinary action.
“For forty-six years, Iranians have resisted this erasure of their memories, their testimonies, and their courage,” said Lawdan Bazargan, a former Iranian political prisoner and human rights activist. “That is why the regime relies on ideologues and useful idiots in Western institutions to launder its image.
“Dr. Saeidi’s work is part of that machinery, an academic façade built on falsified narratives to soften the truth about Iran’s prisons and the resistance that takes place inside them.”
Bazargan also told The Post that the FBI contacted her in May regarding the allegations, prompting her and AAIRIA to take a closer look at Saeidi’s activities.
Elected officials have also weighed in. Arkansas State Rep. Mary Bentley said she was “deeply disturbed” by the claims.
“I can assure you that my constituents do not want their tax dollars being used to support unethical and antisemitic behavior from professors at our public universities,” Bentley said.
The controversy has drawn attention beyond Arkansas. Masih Alinejad, an Iranian dissident based in Brooklyn who was targeted by the Iranian regime in 2021, urged President Trump to intervene and halt what she described as the spread of regime sympathizers in the West.
“She regularly attacks me and other human rights activists who dare to stand up to the same dictator,” Alinejad wrote on X, referring to Saeidi.
According to AAIRIA, Saeidi also endorsed two anti-Israel petitions in 2023 and 2025.
“You can’t get any more antisemitic that,” said Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. “Only a week after the horrors on Oct 7, Saeidi chose to whitewash the terrorist crimes of Hamas.”
{Matzav.com}Israeli Democracy Institute Releases 2025 Chareidi Society Report: Growth in Yeshivos, Stagnation in Employment, and a Complex Economic Picture
The Israel Democracy Institute on Sunday published the 2025 Statistical Yearbook of Chareidi Society, marking the tenth annual edition of the comprehensive report. The yearbook was edited by Dr. Gilad Malach and Dr. Lee Cahaner, research fellows in the Institute’s Program on Chareidi Society in Israel, which operates under the Jacobs Center for a Shared Society headed by attorney Shlomit Ravitzky Tur-Paz.
The report presents an updated snapshot of chareidi society in 2025, alongside an in-depth review of trends over the past decade and, in some areas, the decade preceding it. Long-term analysis points to a widening gap between chareidi women and men: while women continue to advance in education, employment, and professional training, chareidi men have experienced near-complete stagnation in employment rates and integration into a broader range of occupations.
Demographics: A Remarkably Young PopulationIsrael’s chareidi population now numbers approximately 1,452,350 people, accounting for about 14.3% of the country’s population. It is among the youngest populations in the world, with 57% aged 19 or younger. While only about 4% of chareidim are over age 65, roughly 22% of Israel’s entire population under 19 is chareidi.
This age structure places sustained and growing pressure on the education system, labor market, and welfare services—pressures expected to intensify in the coming decades. Fertility rates remain exceptionally high, averaging 6.5 children per woman, with no significant change over the past decade, helping to explain the community’s rapid demographic growth.
Education System: Continued ExpansionOver the past decade, the chareidi education system has expanded at an average annual rate of 3.7%. In the 2024–2025 school year, approximately 420,000 students were enrolled, representing 21% of all students in Israel and 27% of those in the Hebrew education system. About 31% of first-grade students in Hebrew education are enrolled in chareidi schools.
A decade ago, chareidi enrollment stood at around 290,000 students, comprising 24% of Hebrew education. Today, 62.5% of chareidi students attend network schools, 8.5% are in recognized but unofficial institutions, 21% in exempt institutions, and 7.5% in state-chareidi schools.
Eligibility for matriculation certificates among chareidi students has risen from 10% a decade ago to 16% today, though this remains far below the 85% eligibility rate in state and state-religious education.
Yeshivos and Kollelim: Rapid Growth, Statistical GapsIn 2023, the number of unmarried yeshiva students and married kollel yungeleit over age 18 stood at 169,366. This figure has nearly doubled over a decade, rising from about 92,500 in 2013, an increase of 83%, with annual growth exceeding 6%, faster than overall chareidi population growth.
In 2024, however, official figures showed a sharp decline in registered yeshiva students and kollel scholars. The report explains that roughly 70,000 yeshiva bochurim and avreichim aged 18–27 who are liable for military service are no longer state-funded and therefore do not appear in Ministry of Education records. The official 2024 figure of 109,601 students, more than half of whom are over age 31, is thus considered incomplete.
Military and National Service: Numbers Mask RealityOver the past decade, the number of chareidim entering military or civilian service has largely stagnated. In 2024, 3,060 graduates of the chareidi education system entered service, only slightly fewer than the 3,710 recorded in 2014. Given rapid population growth, this represents a real decline of about 25%.
At the same time, 2024 saw a 51% increase in enlistment compared to the previous year, likely influenced by the war and expanded draft obligations. Of those entering service, 2,560 joined the IDF and 500 entered national civilian service.
Notably, 55% of those enlisting in the IDF were placed in general, non-chareidi frameworks, while only 45% joined chareidi-adapted tracks, suggesting that many recruits classified as chareidi are in fact formerly chareidi. Combat placement rates were 40% in general tracks compared to 30% in chareidi tracks. Most civilian service participants begin only after age 24, a pattern unchanged for a decade.
Higher Education and Professional TrainingIn the 2024–2025 academic year, 18,953 chareidi students were enrolled in higher education, accounting for 5.5% of all students in Israel. Growth in recent years has slowed to about 4% annually, with most increases seen in advanced degree programs.
One notable bright spot is technological vocational training through the National Institute for Technological Training (MAHAT). By 2024, 9,600 chareidim were enrolled in these programs—three times the number in 2014. Growth has accelerated to about 17% annually over the past five years, a rate unmatched in other areas of chareidi higher education.
Employment in 2025Employment rates in 2025 stood at 53% for chareidi men and 81% for chareidi women. Chareidi men work an average of 36.5 hours per week, compared to 45 hours for non-chareidi Jewish men, while chareidi women average 32 hours, compared to 38.5 hours among non-chareidi Jewish women.
About 30% of chareidi men work in education, while only 3.5% are employed in high-tech, reflecting little change over the past decade. Among women, 42.5% work in education, similar to levels ten years ago.
Wage gaps remain stark. The average monthly salary for a chareidi man is 9,929 shekels, roughly 49% of that earned by a non-chareidi Jewish man. Chareidi women earn an average of 8,617 shekels, about 67% of their non-chareidi counterparts.
Living Standards and PovertyAbout 33% of chareidi families and 45% of chareidi children live below the poverty line, compared to 14% and 13%, respectively, among non-chareidi Jewish families. Still, this marks an improvement from 2015, when 39% of chareidi families were below the poverty line.
Average monthly household income among chareidim is 14,816 shekels, compared to 24,466 shekels for non-chareidi Jewish households. The relative income gap has widened slightly over the past decade.
Despite lower incomes, 75% of chareidim own their homes, slightly higher than the 72% rate among non-chareidi Jews. However, only 50% own a car, compared to 82% of non-chareidi Jews, reflecting ongoing disparities in mobility and access to employment.
Financial Behavior and PreparednessThe report highlights significant differences in financial behavior. Chareidim are more likely to carry mortgages and loans, save less, and rely on low-yield savings vehicles. They are also less prepared for financial emergencies and retirement, with lower rates of private insurance coverage and pension planning.
Reliance on family support networks is higher, with 59% of chareidim turning to family during financial distress, compared to 37% of non-chareidi Jews. Use of interest-free community loan funds is also far more common.
Researchers’ ConclusionsDr. Malach and Dr. Cahaner concluded that the data reflect a decade of stagnation and even regression in the integration of chareidi men, following a previous decade of progress. Employment rates, income levels, occupational diversity, and enlistment figures have all failed to advance, even as the number of yeshiva students and avreichim has grown rapidly.
By contrast, chareidi women continue to show steady integration into education and employment, though income levels remain low. The researchers point to expanding technological training, higher education, and increased internet use as potential foundations for future integration, if leveraged effectively.
{Matzav.com}
Powerball Jackpot Grows To $1.10 Billion
Last night’s Powerball drawing failed to produce a jackpot winner, sending the prize soaring to an estimated $1.1 billion after the $1 billion payout went unclaimed.
The numbers drawn for the massive jackpot were 1, 28, 31, 57, and 58, with the Powerball number set at 16.
While no one hit the top prize, several players still walked away with major winnings. Two ticket holders in North Carolina and Pennsylvania earned $2 million each by matching all five white balls and adding the Power Play option.
Five additional tickets sold in California, Florida, Michigan, New Jersey, and Virginia matched the five white numbers, earning their holders $1 million apiece.
The drawing had drawn significant attention as it marked the seventh-largest jackpot in Powerball history, narrowly trailing the $1.08 billion prize claimed on July 19, 2023, in downtown Los Angeles.
The most recent jackpot winners before this drawing were players in Missouri and Texas, who split a record-setting $1.787 billion prize on Sept. 6, the second-largest lottery jackpot ever awarded.
{Matzav.com}
“Save This Tweet”: Candace Owens Under Question After Eerie “9/11-Style Attack” Warning
A social media post by conservative commentator Candace Owens has ignited widespread controversy and speculation online after resurfacing in the days following today’s deadly attack in Asutralia.
In the post, shared on X on November 27, Owens wrote that unnamed forces had been “signaling that a 9/11-style attack is coming the second week of December,” adding, “Save this tweet. It will age well.”
The post amassed hundreds of thousands of views.
Following today’s terror attack in Australia, screenshots of Owens’ message began spreading rapidly, with users questioning whether the commentator had advance knowledge of an impending act of terrorism or whether her statement was a vague prediction rooted in online speculation.
Some commentators accused Owens of irresponsibly fueling fear.
Many are demanding clarification from Owens regarding the basis for her claim. As of this writing, Owens has not provided details explaining what intelligence, indicators, or sources she was referencing, nor has she issued a retraction or apology.
{Matzav.com}
WON’T CALL IT BY NAME: Zohran Mamdani Calls Sydney Terrorists “Men With Long Guns”
New York City mayoral-elect Zohran Mamdani issued a statement today responding to the deadly antisemitic terror attack at a Chanukah celebration in Sydney, Australia, but his wording has drawn sharp criticism for downplaying the nature of the assault.
In a post published on X, Mamdani described the attack as “a vile act of antisemitic terror” and said he was mourning those murdered and praying for their families, the Jewish community, and the Chabad movement. He cited reports indicating that at least 11 people were killed and dozens injured, including Rabbi Eli Schlangler.
However, critics quickly seized on Mamdani’s later characterization of the attackers. Rather than referring to them as terrorists, Mamdani wrote that “men with long guns targeted innocents” on Bondi Beach, language that many say minimizes the ideological nature of the attack and echoes phrasing commonly used to avoid labeling antisemitic violence as terrorism.
Mamdani’s statement went on to draw parallels between the Sydney attack and fears held by Jewish communities worldwide, writing that many Jews no longer feel safe worshiping publicly or entering synagogues without armed security. He added that what happened in Bondi is what many Jewish communities fear could happen in their own neighborhoods.
In the final portion of his post, Mamdani referenced a bystander who reportedly ran toward the gunfire and disarmed one of the attackers, urging New Yorkers to confront hatred with urgency and action. He pledged that, once in office, he would work daily to keep Jewish New Yorkers safe “on our streets, our subways, at shul, in every moment of every day.”
Despite those assurances, Mamdani’s response was met with skepticism from Jewish activists and communal figures, many of whom pointed to his longstanding record of hostility toward Israel and repeated refusal to clearly condemn antisemitic actors when they align with causes he supports. Several critics argued that his choice of words — particularly the decision to describe the attackers as “men with long guns” — reflects a broader pattern of rhetorical sanitization when Jewish victims are targeted.
During the New York City mayoral campaign, Mamdani was repeatedly asked about the slogan “Globalize the Intifada.” When asked on a podcast in June whether he would condemn it, he declined to do so and instead described it as language that “means very different things to different people,” and emphasized that the mayor shouldn’t “police language.”
“This was not a random act of violence or generic gun crime,” one Jewish community leader said. “It was terrorism, carried out against Jews celebrating Chanukah. Language matters, especially from someone about to become mayor of the largest Jewish city in the world.”
{Matzav.com}
Bondi Beach Terror Survivor Describes How Cops ‘Froze’ During 20-Minute Shooting Rampage: ‘I Don’t Understand Why’
A survivor of the deadly terror attack at the Chanukah by the Sea celebration in Sydney said police officers on the scene failed to act for an extended period as gunmen carried out a prolonged shooting spree that left 11 people dead.
Shmulik Scuri, who was attending the family-friendly event with his relatives, said the attack began when two suspects opened fire from a bridge overlooking the crowd of Jewish worshippers gathered at Bondi Beach.
“For 20 minutes. They shoot, shoot. Change magazines. And just shoot,” Scuri told reporters, describing the relentless nature of the gunfire.
According to Scuri, several police officers were present but appeared immobilized as the shooting continued. “Twenty minutes, there was four policemen there. Nobody give fire back. Nothing. Like they froze,” he said of the response. “I don’t understand why.”.”
Asked who the attackers appeared to be targeting, Scuri said there was no distinction. “Everyone. Jews. Men, old, kids, everyone! It doesn’t matter.”
Scuri added that one of the gunmen, positioned on the bridge, was able to reload both a rifle and a handgun repeatedly while continuing to fire at the crowd without interruption.
Video footage from the scene shows two terrorists, at least one armed with a shotgun, discharging weapon after weapon from above, raining bullets onto the 2025 Chanukah by the Sea gathering below.
It was only after a local fruit vendor rushed in and managed to disarm one of the attackers that police appeared to respond with gunfire, ultimately killing one of the shooters, according to video evidence from the scene.
Authorities said one of the suspected attackers was killed at the scene, while the second was apprehended in critical condition.
Australian media later identified one of the suspects as Naveed Akram, with police subsequently raiding his residence following the attack.
Law enforcement officials also reported that improvised explosive devices were found inside the vehicle belonging to the deceased gunman at Bondi Beach.
New South Wales Premier Chris Minns condemned the massacre as a targeted act of terror against the Jewish community during the holiday. “This cowardly act of terrified violence is shocking and painful to see and represents some of our worst fears about terrorism in Sydney,” Minns said.
“This attack was designed to target Sydney’s Jewish community on the first day of Chanukah,” he added. “What should’ve been a night of peace and joy celebrated in that community with families and supporters has been shattered by this horrifying evil attack.”
Police acknowledged that one of the attackers had previously appeared on the Australian Security Intelligence Organization watchlist, though he was not classified as “an immediate threat.”
The Bondi Beach massacre is being described as the deadliest shooting in Australia since April 1996, when a gunman killed 35 people and wounded 23 others in Port Arthur, Tasmania.
{Matzav.com}
