Manchester Synagogue Attack Survivor: 'I Saw Evil'
Yoni Finlay was just waking up to the sound of prayers being recited by a group of worshippers inside his synagogue. The 39-year-old father of four had arrived at Heaton Park shul in north Manchester early on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar, ready to sing the dawn prayer with hundreds of others.
But their peaceful morning was shattered when a gunman burst into the building. Finlay, who has been described as a "very normal guy" by his friends and family, helped barricade the doors as the attacker tried to force his way in. He recalls seeing a large knife and what looked like a bomb strapped to the gunman's waist.
"It was his whole demeanour," Finlay said of the attacker. "He was angry. Very, very angry. He just wanted to kill Jews, and he was prepared to die for that."
The moment marked the beginning of a terrifying ordeal for Finlay and others inside the synagogue. Armed police arrived within seven minutes and shot the gunman, but not before he had attacked two people who were killed in the attack.
Behind the scene, Finlay was hit by a police bullet that pierced his chest and exited through his back. He has undergone extensive treatment to repair the damage.
Finlay's account of the attack is one of the most harrowing yet of its kind, with witnesses describing scenes of chaos and carnage. "I've got what I've been told is survivors guilt," Finlay said of the trauma he experienced in the aftermath of the attack.
As he struggles to come to terms with his ordeal, Finlay is also grappling with the reality that such an attack was possible in Britain because of normalised antisemitism. He believes that a lack of strong leadership and a failure to tackle hate speech have allowed this kind of hatred to flourish.
"The government does play a part in it," he said, warning against pushing British Jews behind their already visibly guarded community walls. "The answer isn't to keep putting up more walls and gates... We're not tackling the root cause of it."
Finlay's voice trembled with emotion as he spoke about the need for compassion to overcome hate. He believes that if people chose to learn from one another instead of dividing, they could build bridges and create a world where hatred does not have a place.
For Finlay, there is still much work to be done to prevent such attacks in the future. But with his courage and determination, he is determined to spread a message of hope and unity, even in the face of evil.
Yoni Finlay was just waking up to the sound of prayers being recited by a group of worshippers inside his synagogue. The 39-year-old father of four had arrived at Heaton Park shul in north Manchester early on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar, ready to sing the dawn prayer with hundreds of others.
But their peaceful morning was shattered when a gunman burst into the building. Finlay, who has been described as a "very normal guy" by his friends and family, helped barricade the doors as the attacker tried to force his way in. He recalls seeing a large knife and what looked like a bomb strapped to the gunman's waist.
"It was his whole demeanour," Finlay said of the attacker. "He was angry. Very, very angry. He just wanted to kill Jews, and he was prepared to die for that."
The moment marked the beginning of a terrifying ordeal for Finlay and others inside the synagogue. Armed police arrived within seven minutes and shot the gunman, but not before he had attacked two people who were killed in the attack.
Behind the scene, Finlay was hit by a police bullet that pierced his chest and exited through his back. He has undergone extensive treatment to repair the damage.
Finlay's account of the attack is one of the most harrowing yet of its kind, with witnesses describing scenes of chaos and carnage. "I've got what I've been told is survivors guilt," Finlay said of the trauma he experienced in the aftermath of the attack.
As he struggles to come to terms with his ordeal, Finlay is also grappling with the reality that such an attack was possible in Britain because of normalised antisemitism. He believes that a lack of strong leadership and a failure to tackle hate speech have allowed this kind of hatred to flourish.
"The government does play a part in it," he said, warning against pushing British Jews behind their already visibly guarded community walls. "The answer isn't to keep putting up more walls and gates... We're not tackling the root cause of it."
Finlay's voice trembled with emotion as he spoke about the need for compassion to overcome hate. He believes that if people chose to learn from one another instead of dividing, they could build bridges and create a world where hatred does not have a place.
For Finlay, there is still much work to be done to prevent such attacks in the future. But with his courage and determination, he is determined to spread a message of hope and unity, even in the face of evil.