Texas rabbi says he is ‘alive today’ thanks to police training that helped him act when terrorist became ‘belligerent’: Tells Jewish groups across US to participate in active-shooter courses
그만큼 텍사스 rabbi who endured a 10-hour kidnapping by a British anti-Semite demanding the release of an al-Qaeda terrorists has credited his active-shooter training for helping him and his followers escape alive.
Charlie Cytron-Walker and three of his congregation were rescued unharmed on Saturday night after their captor was shot and killed by police.
Malik Faisal Akram, a 44-year-old British national, seized the group at around 10:30am on Saturday at the Beth Israel Congregation in Colleyville, 텍사스 – 약 15 miles from Fort Worth.
He demanded that Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist known as ‘Lady al-Qaeda’ who is serving her 86 year sentence in prison in Fort Worth, be freed.
Akram was shot and killed by police on Saturday night, in a firefight with the FBI’s Hostage Rescue Team.


Charlie Cytron-Walker was held hostage with three members of his congregation on Saturday

SWAT team members deploy near the Congregation Beth Israel Synagogue in Colleyville, 텍사스, 토요일에

Officers are seen surrounding the building in Texas on Saturday
Cytron-Walker, who has presided over the 140-strong congregation since 2006, on Sunday said his training enabled him to deal with the situation.
‘Over the years, my congregation and I have participated in multiple security courses from the Colleyville Police Department, the FBI, the Anti-Defamation League, and Secure Community Network,’ 그는 말했다.
‘We are alive today because of that education. I encourage all Jewish congregations, religious groups, 학교, and others to participate in active-shooter and security courses.
‘In the last hour of our hostage crisis, the gunman became increasingly belligerent and threatening.
‘Without the instruction we received, we would not have been prepared to act and flee when the situation presented itself.’
The training of Jewish congregations in dealing with threatening situations has become more widespread since the October 2018 shooting at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburg that killed 11 worshippers – among the worst anti-Semitic attacks in U.S. 역사.
That was followed in April 2019 by a shooting at a Chabad in Poway, California which saw one killed and three injured, and a December 2019 attack in Jersey City which left three dead.
7 월 2020, Yonatan Stern, an Israeli-American security instructor who runs Cherev Gidon, a training firm and facility in Pennsylvania, 말했다 Forward that he had already trained volunteer teams at 40 synagogues around the country over the past year.
Colonel Sharon Gat founded the Caliber 3 initiative to teach Jews across the country how to use guns to defend their congregations against shooters – bypassing the traditional security guard model and drawing concern from top communal security officials.
‘The average person in these trainings, 후 40 시간, I can say there’s a very, very good chance that if an active shooter comes into his synagogue, the active shooter will be dead, and people will be saved,’ Gat said.

Cytron-Walker, from Michigan, has been in charge of the Colleyville congregation since 2006

SWAT teams from the Colleyville Police Department responded to the synagogue after emergency calls began at about 10:41 오전. during the Sabbath service

The standoff took place at the Congregation Beth Israel, in Colleyville, 다만 27 miles from Dallas
He told Forward in 2020 that the synagogue volunteers learn handgun skills and safety, Krav Maga hand-to-hand fighting techniques, first aid and strategies for responding to an active shooter as a team.
‘There’s not a lot of speaking, not a lot of theory,’ Gat said. ‘Besides eating a little bit at lunch, you’re just training and sweating and bleeding, 그게 다야.’
The training from Gat is free, thanks to a Jewish Republican political donor and philanthropist based near San Diego, Robert Shilman, who covers most of the costs through his foundation.
In California, another community leader, Rabbi Raziel Cohen, goes by the name ‘Tactical Rabbi’ and trains congregations in how to deal with active shooters.
Until April 2019, there was no funding available for weapons training.
But after the shooting in Poway, Governor Gavin Newsom announced an additional $500,000 for the state’s Nonprofit Security Grant Program, taking their available funds to $15 백만.
‘There are some buildings out here with an annual quarter-million-dollar security budget,’ said Rabbi Yossi Eilfort of Magen Am, a San Diego-based religious security firm.
‘I grew up with Chabad, and our buildings are mostly not playing in that ballpark, so we need to find other security solutions.’
Grants from the Department of Homeland Security’s Urban Areas Security Initiative have also helped bridge the gap, funding ‘target hardening’ infrastructure such as fencing, alarms and surveillance cameras.