I saw evil as attacker tried to barge into Manchester synagogue, rabbi says

Judith MoritzPrivate reporter, Manchester And
Tom McARTHUR
Getty ImagesA rabbi told the moment when a man tried to enter the Manchester synagogue during a deadly attack, and said to the BBC, “I saw evil, I saw hatred.”
Rabbi Daniel Walker said that he and others hold the doors of the Heaton Park Synagogue, because Jihad Al-Shamie “the body is chargeing the body, throwing heavy plant containers, doing his best to enter”.
“I have to say that people who run to help others instead of escaping.” He said.
53 -year -old Adrian Daulby and 66 -year -old Melvin Cravitz died after both went to aggressive people and stabbing a man on Thursday.
The other three people stay in the hospital with serious injuries. Police called Jihad Al-Shamie, who was killed at the scene, as aggressive and acted as a terrorist incident.
Rabbi Walker said that the incident took place before Yom Kippur service took place before it was in full flow and then hundreds of people would continue.
He said: “Especially if a gentleman did not behave as quickly as he was and locked the doors, [we] He can imagine what will happen. “
Explaining how the incident emerged, a few people said that the attacker could not get in to ensure that the attacker closed the doors from the inside.
After the police arrived, at some point, Rabbi Walker said that two people were injured in the building.
The Great Manchester police said that a man was killed and another person was injured by the police gunshot.
A description of the force, the man who was hit by the police as Daulby in a deadly way.
Speaking with the BBC, Rabbi Walker said that the killed and the wider community would do his best to offer comfort to their families.
He said, “There is fear, but there is also support.”
“I believe and I hope we can provide assurance and hope. I believe that we can’t allow it to beat us”.
The Prime Minister and the witnesses praised Rabbi Walker and security guards as “heroes” for their actions.
When the BBC was asked if he saw himself as a hero, he said, “I’m not sure that this is true.”
However, a witness at the scene said that the rabbi himself and others remained calm for taking the community to security.
The Mr. Daulby family paid tribute to his “heroes who died during the” courage to save others “.
The family added, “The family was shocked by the tragic, sudden death of such a beautiful person towards the earth,” the family added.




