Mourners honor the NYPD officer Didarul Islam, who was killed in Manhattan skyscraper attack

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Pallbearers with the NYPD Ceremonial Unit carry the casket of officer Didarul Islam during his funeral on July 31, 2025, in New York. (AP)
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Family members of officer Didarul Islam walk behind the hearse after Islam's funeral onJuly 31, 2025, in New York. (AP)
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New York Police officers hang a banner for the funeral of officer Didarul Islam on July 31, 2025, in New York. (AP)
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People pray during the funeral of officer Didarul Islam outside the Parkchester Jame Masjid mosque on July 31, 2025, in New York. (AP)
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Updated 01 August 2025
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Mourners honor the NYPD officer Didarul Islam, who was killed in Manhattan skyscraper attack

  • Officer Didarul Islam was killed during a shooting rampage by a former high school football player in Manhattan
  • A migrant from Bangladesh, Islam was honored by President Trump and other officials for saving other lives

NEW YORK: Mourners packed a New York mosque on Thursday to honor a Bangladesh-born police officer who embraced the job of protecting his adopted city and gave his life for it when a gunman opened fire in an office building this week.
Officer Didarul Islam “did believe in the American dream, not as something handed down but as something built with your own hands,” Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch told Islam’s family and friends as his fellow officers lined up rows deep outside the Bronx house of worship.
Dignitaries and members of the New York’s thriving Bangladeshi community also paid tribute to the fallen officer during a memorial that emphasized the importance he placed on his family, background and service to the city.
A married father of two with a third child on the way, the 36-year-old was working a New York Police Department-approved private security detail, in uniform, when he and three other people were killed Monday at the Manhattan skyscraper that houses the NFL’s headquarters and other corporate offices.
“To our family, he was our world. To the city, he was a proud NYPD officer who served with compassion and integrity. He lived to help others,” Islam’s widow said in a statement that a relative read on her behalf at the service at the Parkchester Jame Masjid mosque.
With officers stationed on surrounding rooftops for security, fire trucks used their ladders to hold a huge American flag over a nearby street. A flatbed truck carried a digital billboard showing photos of Islam and a commemorative message from his union.
 




New York Police officers salute as the hearse carrying the casket of NYPD officer Didarul Islam passes after his funeral on , July 31, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura )

White House sends condolences
After coming to the United States, Islam began building a career in the nation’s largest police force. He described policing as “a blanket of the community, there to provide comfort and care,” the police commissioner said.
Islam served as a school safety agent before becoming a patrol officer less than four years ago, and was promoted posthumously Thursday to detective.
“He could have gone into any other occupation he wanted, but he wanted to put on that uniform, and he wanted to protect fellow New Yorkers. And he wanted to let us know that he believed in what this city and what this country stood for,” Mayor Eric Adams, a Democrat, told the gathering. “That’s the greatest symbol of what we know we are as a country.”
In Washington, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt began her daily briefing by expressing President Donald Trump’s condolences to Islam’s family, saying he “made the ultimate sacrifice in defense of his fellow New Yorkers.”
A ‘humble, steady, and reliable’ officer
Like others who spoke, Imam Zakir Ahmed highlighted the officer’s immigrant background and Muslim faith. But said Islam “lived at a time when people like him are too often feared, vilified and made to feel like outsiders.”
“It’s time for New York and America to give back — to see us, to hear us, to protect our dignity, the way Officer Islam protected yours,” Ahmed said.
The eldest of several siblings, Islam supported his parents in Bangladesh, as well as his wife and two young sons in the Bronx, the imam said. The police commissioner said Islam worked a long day at a parade Sunday, then picked up private security hours Monday at the office building.
Deputy Inspector Muhammad Ashraf, the commander of the busy Bronx precinct where Islam worked, said he was a “humble, steady and reliable” officer.
“He knew what it meant to protect the place that gave him a new beginning, and in return, he gave everything back,” Ashraf said at Thursday’s service.
After the service, the streets filled with people, mostly men, kneeling in prayer. Some Muslim officers took part, as colleagues stood in formation behind them and looked on.




New York Police Academy cadets line the street outside the Parkchester Jame Masjid mosque for the funeral of officer Didarul Islam on July 31, 2025, in New York. (AP)

Later, officers saluted as Islam’s casket, draped in US and NYPD flags, was brought to a hearse for burial at a cemetery in Totowa, New Jersey.
Another victim, real estate firm worker Julia Hyman, 27, was mourned at an emotional service Wednesday at a Manhattan synagogue.
Funeral arrangements for the two others killed, security guard Aland Etienne and investment firm executive Wesley LePatner, have not been made public.
Governor praises officer for saving lives
Police identified the gunman as Shane Tamura, a 27-year old former high school football player who most recently worked in a Las Vegas casino’s surveillance department. Authorities say he believed he had a brain disease linked to contact sports and accused the NFL of hiding the dangers of playing football.
On Thursday, police said they found more than 800 rounds of ammunition in Tamura’s car and had recovered 47 shell casings in the building’s lobby and the office floor where Hyman was killed.
Police said Tamura had a history of mental illness, but they haven’t elaborated other than to say they found psychiatric medication prescribed to him at his residence in Las Vegas.
Officials said he was heading for the NFL’s office but took the wrong elevator and went by mistake to another floor. The gunfire seriously injured an NFL employee in the lobby.
Islam “saved lives. He was out front,” Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, said at Thursday’s service. “Others may be alive today because he was the barrier.”
 


How an Australian citizen of Syrian origin became the hero of Bondi Beach and his nation

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How an Australian citizen of Syrian origin became the hero of Bondi Beach and his nation

  • Ahmed Al-Ahmed tackled an armed attacker during the Sydney terror assault, sustaining injuries but saving countless lives
  • The son of Syrian Muslim immigrants from Idlib has been applauded by Australian and world leaders as a true national hero

LONDON: Bondi Beach, one of Australia’s most beloved seaside destinations, became the site of unspeakable violence on Sunday evening. What started as a joyful Hanukkah celebration attended by families and tourists transformed in moments into a scene of chaos and bloodshed.
Gunmen opened fire on crowds gathered for the “Chanukah by the Sea” event, leaving multiple people dead and dozens wounded. But amid the terror and panic, a single act of courage stood out.
An unarmed man tackled one of the attackers, wrestled a rifle from his hands and placed it out of reach, likely saving scores of lives. The man was Ahmed Al-Ahmed, a 43-year-old father of two, a fruit-shop owner and a Muslim Australian of Syrian heritage.
Before that night, Al-Ahmed was far from a public figure. He ran a modest fruit shop in Sydney’s Sutherland Shire, greeting customers by name and living a life centered on family, faith and community.
But his actions that evening transformed him from a quiet local business owner into a symbol of bravery recognized around the world.

According to his cousin Mustafa Al-Asaad, who spoke to Australian media after the attack, Al-Ahmed acted not out of calculation but conscience.
“When he saw people dying and their families being shot, he couldn’t bear to see people dying,” Al-Asaad said. “It was a humanitarian act, more than anything else. It was a matter of conscience.
“He’s very proud that he saved even one life. When he saw this scene, people dying of gunfire, he told me, ‘I couldn’t bear this. God gave me strength. I believe I’m going to stop this person killing people’.”
The footage that emerged soon after the attack captured the moment Al-Ahmed ran toward danger.
With chaos erupting around him, he sprinted at a gunman and brought him to the ground, disarming the attacker in the process. The images spread across television and social media, shocking viewers in Australia and beyond.

But the act of confronting an armed assailant came at great personal cost. Al-Ahmed was shot twice during the struggle, sustaining serious injuries to his hand and shoulder.
He was rushed to hospital and underwent surgery, where he remained in serious but stable condition as tributes poured in.
The attack itself has been widely condemned. Australian authorities quickly characterized it as a terrorist act, and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made a public address praising the courage of civilians who confronted the gunmen.
“We have seen Australians today run towards danger in order to help others,” he said. “These Australians are heroes, and their bravery has saved lives.”
In a separate statement, New South Wales Premier Chris Minns wrote on Facebook: “His incredible bravery no doubt saved countless lives when he disarmed a terrorist at enormous personal risk.” 

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns visits Ahmed Al-Ahmed, who was identified on social media as the bystander who hid behind parked cars and seized a rifle from one of the gunmen during the deadly shooting at Bondi Beach on Sunday, at a hospital in Sydney, Australia, December 15, 2025. (Reuters)

Minns, who visited the injured Al-Ahmed at a hospital in Sydney on Sunday, said it was an honor to “to pass on the thanks of people across NSW.”
“There is no doubt that more lives would have been lost if not for Al-Ahmed’s selfless courage.”
Across the Pacific, US political leaders also weighed in. President Donald Trump, speaking at the White House, commended Al-Ahmed’s decisive action.
“It’s been a very, very brave person … who went and attacked frontally one of the shooters and saved a lot of lives,” Trump said. He referred to the Bondi Beach attack as “a terrible situation” but emphasized the courage that shone through in a moment of crisis. 

People pay respects at Bondi Pavilion to victims of a shooting during a Jewish holiday celebration at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Australia, December 15, 2025. (Reuters)

For many observers, the images of Al-Ahmed intervening challenged simplistic narratives about identity and violence.
Here was a Muslim of Middle Eastern heritage, acting not out of ideology, but out of a sense of moral obligation and human solidarity, intervening to protect people — many of them Jewish — at a festival of light.
It was a moment that not only captured global attention but resonated deeply with communities confronting rising Islamophobia and antisemitism alike.
Muslim leaders in Australia and abroad condemned the violent attack while highlighting Al-Ahmed’s response as reflective of values shared across faith traditions. 

A police officer removes police tape from outside the house of the suspects of a shooting incident on a Jewish holiday celebration at Bondi Beach, in Bonnyrigg, Sydney, Australia, December 15, 2025. (Reuters)

His father, Mohamed Fateh Al-Ahmed, told reporters through an interpreter that he was proud of his son’s actions.
“He has the urge to protect people,” he said. “When he saw people lying on the ground and blood everywhere, his conscience and soul immediately compelled him to pounce on one of the terrorists and snatch the gun from him.
“I feel pride and honor — because my son is a hero of Australia.”
His mother, Malakeh Hasan Al-Ahmed, echoed her husband’s sentiments. 

People pay respects at Bondi Pavilion to victims of a shooting during a Jewish holiday celebration at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Australia, December 15, 2025. (Reuters)

“He saw they were dying, and people were losing their lives, and when that guy (the shooter) ran out of ammo, he took it from him, but he was hit,” she said. “We pray that God saves him.”
Al-Ahmed’s family background is rooted in the Syrian diaspora. Relatives say his parents emigrated from the Idlib region, a part of northwest Syria marked by decades of conflict and displacement.
In Australia, they built a new life, working hard, raising children and becoming part of a multicultural society where people from many backgrounds live and work side by side.
It was in that environment — shaped by community ties yet rarely thrust into the spotlight — that Al-Ahmed grew up. A practising Muslim, he attended local mosque events and was known as a generous presence in his neighborhood. 

Health workers move a woman on a stretcher to an ambulance after a shooting incident at Bondi Beach in Sydney on December 14, 2025. (AFP)

His life before the attack was defined by ordinary concerns: early mornings at the fruit shop, football games with his children, weekend dinners with extended family. Nothing in his personal history suggested that he would become a symbol of defiance and courage in the face of terror.
After the attack, though, his community rallied around him. Messages of support and admiration came from across Australia, with neighbors who knew him before the tragedy expressing shock at the sudden spotlight.
Fundraisers were established to assist with medical costs and support his family, contributions arriving from customers, strangers, and community organisations alike.
Some donors said they contributed not only because of his heroism, but because his story felt like a reminder of shared humanity. 

A view of the scene at the Bondi Pavilion in the aftermath of the Bondi Beach shootings in Sydney on December 15, 2025. (AFP)

Yet Al-Ahmed himself, according to those close to him, has been humble about the attention. Friends said he does not seek accolades or applause.
The broader impact of the Bondi Beach attack has sparked national debate in Australia about public safety, religious tolerance, and how to confront extremism without dividing communities.
But across those conversations, Al-Ahmed’s act of bravery has offered a rare point of unity — a moment in which people of different backgrounds, religions and political views have recognized not just courage, but compassion.
In interviews with international outlets, scholars and civil society leaders have described Al-Ahmed’s intervention as a striking example of moral courage — an instinctive choice to protect others even at great risk to oneself. 

People gather in solidarity with victims of the Bondi beach attack in Sydney and to light the first candle of Hannukah, in front of the Australian embassy in Paris, France December 14, 2025. (Reuters)

International reaction to Al-Ahmed’s courage has also come from Jewish community leaders in Australia and abroad, many of whom expressed deep gratitude for his actions.
Some saw in his intervention an affirmation that solidarity can cross centuries-old divides, even in moments of profound fear.
When asked how he felt about the worldwide attention, one of his close friends said Al-Ahmed was overwhelmed but grateful, insisting that he hoped his story would not be used to sow division, but to encourage unity.
“I am proud that my son helped people, he saved lives, souls,” Al-Ahmed’s mother said. “God will not harm him because he was a benefactor. My son has always been brave, he helps people, that’s who he is.”