Yom Kippur services were cancelled and worshippers were sent home while others who were walking to synagogue were stopped and sent back by Jewish Community Security after terror hit Manchester, UK, on Yom Kippur morning. A man rammed a car into worshippers outside of Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation and then jumped out of the vehicle and started stabbing the already injured Jews. Bloodshed inside the synagogue was prevented due to the congregation’s quick actions, locking the doors and securing those inside.
Police said the first emergency calls came around 9:30 in the morning. Armed officers confronted the suspect within minutes and shot him dead outside the synagogue. Two members of the Jewish community were killed, and at least three others were seriously wounded. The attacker was wearing what looked like a suicide vest, but bomb experts later confirmed it was fake.
The suspect has been identified as Jihad Al Shamie, a thirty-five-year-old British citizen of Syrian descent. Counterterrorism police arrested three others in connection with the assault, two men and a woman, on suspicion of terrorism offenses. Officials have classified the incident as a terror attack driven by antisemitism and Islamic extremism.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the attack horrific and pledged more police protection for synagogues and Jewish schools nationwide. He cut short his European trip to chair emergency meetings and promised that Jews in Britain would not be left vulnerable. Across the country, police patrols around Jewish institutions were visibly increased.
This week’s attack is not an isolated horror. Jihadists have repeatedly singled out Jewish communities for attack. In 2012, a French Islamist gunned down children and a rabbi at a school in Toulouse. In 2015, shoppers were massacred in the Hypercacher kosher supermarket in Paris, days after the Charlie Hebdo killings. In 2019, a Syrian extremist in Halle, Germany, tried to storm a synagogue on Yom Kippur, murdering two people outside when he failed to breach the security doors. And in Israel, jihadist groups have carried out bombings, shootings, and stabbings against Jewish civilians for decades. The pattern is clear—synagogues, schools, and gatherings of Jews are prime targets for those who see slaughter as holy war.
The Manchester bloodshed adds Britain’s name to the grim list. It is not enough, Jewish leaders warn, to mourn and move on. The families of those murdered will bury their loved ones this week, but the larger question remains unanswered: how to ensure that the next Jewish child walking to synagogue does not become another headline.
