San Diego mosque attack tests faith, security and resilience

Two gunmen tried to storm the Islamic Center of San Diego; guardian Amin Abdullah, store manager Mansour Kaziha, and community member Nadir Awad died heroically protecting others as about 140 students and teachers sheltered inside. The attack underscores a surge in religiously motivated hate and Islamophobia in San Diego, with local leaders noting online radicalization and years of perceived indifference toward Muslim security concerns. CAIR reported record complaints nationwide, and past incidents like the Poway synagogue attack are cited as context. Officials vow increased protection for houses of worship, while community members mourn and call for stronger engagement to counter Islamophobia.
- The deepest fears of San Diego’s religious communities were realized in Islamic Center shooting NBC News
- Police ordered guns to be removed from mosque shooter’s home in 2025 The Washington Post
- Bullying, rejection, concerning behavior cited in documents linked to mosque shooting suspects San Diego Union-Tribune
- San Diego Mosque Shooter So Alarmed Police, They Seized Father’s Guns The New York Times
- Year before shooting, father removed guns from home of Islamic Center teen gunman NBC 7 San Diego
Reading Insights
0
5
6 min
vs 7 min read
92%
1,326 → 101 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on NBC News