Holocaust survivor and 10-year-old with gentle soul among those killed in Bondi Beach shooting
- - Holocaust survivor and 10-year-old with gentle soul among those killed in Bondi Beach shooting
KRISTEN GELINEAU December 16, 2025 at 12:49 AM
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1 / 2Australia ShootingPeople weep and offer flowers at a floral memorial for victims of Sunday's shooting at the Bondi Pavilion at Bondi Beach on Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2025, in Sydney, Australia. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)
SYDNEY (AP) â Before the bloodshed and broken hearts, there was a little girl with a gentle soul, a loving grandmother who delivered meals to the needy and a young man dubbed a âgolden personâ for his kindness. And there was an 87-year-old grandfather who sought solace in Australia after surviving the Holocaust, only to die in what officials have called antisemitic terrorism.
They are among the 15 people killed Sunday evening by two gunmen during a Hanukkah celebration at Sydneyâs famous Bondi Beach. Australiaâs federal police commissioner said it was a terrorist attack inspired by the Islamic State group.
Here is a closer look at some of the victims:
The youngest victim who âsaw beauty in everyoneâ
Matilda, a 10-year-old whose last name has been withheld at the request of her family, was the youngest person killed in the massacre.
Matildaâs language teacher, Irina Goodhew, who launched a GoFundMe for the girlâs grieving family, described her in a Facebook post as a gentle girl who saw beauty in everyone.
âMatilda was a bright and loving soul who taught us that true goodness is found in the love and compassion we share,â Goodhew wrote. âHer memory reminds us to carry kindness in our hearts and spread it to the world. May the light of her eyes live on through us â in our actions, our words, and our love for one another.â
The assistant rabbi who showed a kind heart
Eli Schlanger, assistant rabbi at Chabad-Lubavitch of Bondi, organized Sundayâs Chanukah by the Sea event. He was a father of five, the youngest of whom was born just two months ago, according to Chabad, an Orthodox Jewish movement that runs outreach worldwide.
The 41-year-old, London-born Schlanger also served as chaplain to the stateâs corrective services department and as a chaplain at a Sydney hospital, where he ministered to patients and families.
Schlanger would go wherever he was needed to help people including prisons, said his friend, Ben Wright.
âEli was a very special person,â Wright told The while standing near a cordoned-off section of Bondi the morning after the attack, a black box containing Torah verses strapped to his arm. âHe spent a lot of his time trying to get Jews to do one good deed.â
Wright, who saw friends and strangers gunned down during the attack while cradling his 6-month-old baby, said he hopes to emulate Schlangerâs goodness.
A pillar of the Jewish community known for kindness
Yaakov Levitan, a rabbi and father of four, was known for his kindness and dedication to helping others, according to the Chabad movement, which described him as a âvital, behind-the-scenes pillarâ of Sydneyâs Jewish community.
Originally from Johannesburg, the 39-year-old served as the general manager of Chabad of Bondi and worked with the Sydney Beth Din, or religious court.
Thoughtful volunteer who delivered meals
Marika Pogany, an 82-year-old grandmother and community volunteer, delivered thousands of kosher meals to those in need, the Federation of Jewish Communities in Hungary said in a statement.
COA, a Sydney volunteer service for Jewish seniors, said in an Instagram post that Pogany was part of the âbeating heart of COA and a source of warmth for thousands of people.â
âFor 29 years she arrived at COA with her quiet smile and her steady kindness,â COA wrote. âShe lifted the room simply by being in it. She asked for nothing and gave everything.â
Zuzana ÄaputovĂĄ, the former president of Slovakia, called her âMarikaâ and described Pogany as her âlong-term close friendâ who had visited Slovakia every year since 1989.
A âgolden personâ with a talent for soccer
Dan Elkayam, a 27-year-old French national described by his brother as âa golden person,â was a talented soccer player who lived with his girlfriend in Sydneyâs eastern suburbs.
Elkayamâs brother, JĂ©rĂ©mie Elkayam, told broadcaster France Info that his brother was âsomeone extraordinary ⊠who profited from life, wasnât at all materialistic, who understood the value of things and who loved to travel.â
âWe are four brothers and, of the four, for me he was the kindest of us,â JĂ©rĂ©mie Elkayam said.
Sydney soccer club Rockdale Ilinden FC said in a statement that Elkayam was an extremely talented and popular player with the clubâs Premier League team who âwill be sorely missed by his teammates and everyone that knew him.â
âThose who were closest to him described him as a down to earth, happy go lucky individual who was warmly embraced by those he met,â club President Dennis Loether said.
French Foreign Minister Jean-NoĂ«l Barrot wrote in a post on X that Elkayamâs death was âyet another tragic manifestation of a revolting surge in antisemitic hatred that we must defeat.â
Retired police officer considered a rugby club âlegendâ
Peter Meagher, known to friends as âMarzo,â was a retired police officer and a team manager and beloved volunteer at Randwick rugby club, which condemned the âabhorrent targeted attack on our Jewish community" in a statement Monday and called Meagher an âabsolute legend in our club.â
Meagher was working as a freelance photographer at the Bondi Hanukkah event, the club said, noting his presence was âsimply a catastrophic case of being in the wrong place and at the wrong time.â
A photograph with the statement showed âMarzoâ written in chalk on a rugby field, along with a team jersey.
Heroic bystander who tried to stop the violence
Reuven Morrison, 62, was killed while trying to stop one of the shooters, according to his daughter, Sheina Gutnick.
Gutnick told CBS News that her father is the person seen in widely circulated video footage throwing objects at the gunman, which Gutnick said were bricks, after another passerby, Ahmed al Ahmed, wrestled the gun away from the shooter.
âI believe after Ahmed managed to get the gun off the terrorist, my father had then gone to try and unjam the gun, to try and attempt shooting. He was screaming at the terrorist,â she said.
Morrison migrated to Australia from the Soviet Union five decades ago to escape antisemitic persecution. He thought Australia would be safe, Gutnick said.
âThis is where he was going to have a family, where he is going to live a life away from persecution,â she said. âAnd for many years, he did do that; he lived a wonderful, free life. Until Australia turned on him.â
The Holocaust survivor who protected his wife
Alex Kleytman was an 87-year-old Holocaust survivor who had moved to Australia from Ukraine.
âI have no husband. I donât know where is his body,â his wife Larisa Kleytman told reporters outside a Sydney hospital Sunday. âNobody can give me any answer.â
Larisa told The Australian newspaper that her husband died while protecting her.
âWe were standing and suddenly came the âboom boomâ, and everybody fell down,â she said. âAt this moment, he was behind me and at one moment he decided to go close to me. He pushed his body up because he wanted to stay near me.â
The couple survived âthe unspeakable terror of the Holocaustâ as children before moving to Australia, according to a 2023 report by JewishCare, a service provider for Australiaâs Jewish community.
A grandfather filled with family pride
Tibor Weitzen, a 78-year-old grandfather who saw the best in people, migrated to Australia from Israel in 1988, his granddaughter said.
âMy grandfather was truly the best you could ask for,â Leor Amzalak told the Australian Broadcasting Corp., the countryâs public broadcaster. âHe was so proud of us ⊠and loved us more than life itself.â
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Panagiotis Pylas in Sydney, John Leicester in Paris, Justin Spike in Budapest, Hungary, and Melanie Lidman in Tel Aviv, Israel, contributed to this report.
Source: âAOL Breakingâ