The man hailed as the hero of the Bondi Beach massacre, who charged a gunman from behind and wrestled away his rifle as he fired into a crowd, is now fighting a new battle—for his own life—after undergoing the first of multiple surgeries for severe bullet wounds, his family has revealed.
Ahmed al Ahmed, a 43-year-old Sydney resident, is recovering in St. George Hospital after being shot in the arm and hand during his desperate, unarmed intervention, which is credited with stopping the shooter and saving countless lives. His cousin, Jozay Alkanji, confirmed the gravity of his injuries, stating, “He’s done the first surgery. I think he’s got two or three surgeries, which depend on the doctor.”

The attack, carried out by a 50-year-old father and his 24-year-old son at a Jewish Hanukkah celebration, left 15 people dead in Australia’s worst mass shooting in nearly three decades. Amid the horror, a cellphone video captured al Ahmed’s astonishing bravery: hiding behind parked cars before launching himself at the gunman’s back, seizing his rifle, and tackling him to the ground.
“It’s the most unbelievable scene I’ve ever seen,” said New South Wales Premier Chris Minns, who labeled al Ahmed “a genuine hero.” U.S. President Donald Trump called him “a very, very brave person” who saved many lives.
A City’s Gratitude: From a Billionaire’s Donation to a Child’s Flowers
The nation’s gratitude has poured in with stunning speed. A GoFundMe campaign set up for al Ahmed’s recovery soared past A$200,000 in just hours, with a single A$99,999 donation from billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman. Outside the hospital, complete strangers arrived with flowers. A seven-year-old girl named Miroslava held a bouquet with a note that read, “To Ahmed: for courage and saved lives.”
“My husband is Russian, my father is Jewish, my grandpa is Muslim,” said Veronica Pochuev, who brought her daughter to the hospital. “This is not only about Bondi, this is about every person.”
Why It Matters
For many in Sydney’s Muslim community, al Ahmed’s act carries profound religious significance. “He potentially saved many people yesterday, and that, for us, from an Islamic perspective, is to have saved all of mankind,” said Yomna Touni, 43, who is helping raise funds. She contrasted his heroism with the attackers’ evil, citing the Quranic teaching that “killing one person is like killing all of mankind, and that’s what those terrorists did.”
Ahmed al Ahmed’s story is now etched into Australian history—not just as a moment of courage, but as an ongoing fight. The hero who stopped a shooter with his bare hands must now endure a series of surgeries, a long rehabilitation, and the permanent scars of the day he stepped into the line of fire so others could live.
















