Rabbi says he escaped synagogue gunman
He, 2 others fled after throwing a chair
A rabbi who endured a tense, 10-hour standoff at a Texas synagogue said Monday that he and the other hostages fled after he threw a chair at the assailant.
Rabbi Charlie Cytron-Walker spoke to “CBS Mornings” hours after the FBI released a statement calling the standoff a “terrorism-related matter in which the Jewish community was targeted.”
Cytron-Walker said that in the last hour of Saturday’s standoff, it appeared the assailant, British national Malik Faisal Akram, “wasn’t getting what he wanted.”
“It didn’t look good, it didn’t sound good,” Cytron-Walker said. “We were terrified.” He said he saw an opportunity and made sure the other two remaining hostages were ready. The exit was not far away, he said.
“I told them to go,” he said. “I threw a chair at the gunman and I headed for the door. And all three of us were able to get out without even a shot being fired.”
Akram, 44, was killed after an FBI SWAT team swept into the Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville. The transatlantic investigation into the incident intensified with the arrest of two teenagers in Britain late Sunday. The details of their alleged involvement were not immediately released. The FBI said the Joint Terrorism Task Force was investigating – and that preventing terrorism was the agency’s “No. 1 priority.”
“We never lose sight of the threat extremists pose to the Jewish community and to other religious, racial and ethnic groups,” the statement said. “We have had a close and enduring relationship with the Jewish community for many years.”
The FBI’s latest statement differed from remarks immediately following the standoff when the bureau’s Dallas chief said the assailant’s demands were “specifically focused on issues not connected to the Jewish community.” Investigators said Akram expressed support for Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist serving 86 years in a Texas prison for attempting to murder U.S. military personnel in Afghanistan more than a decade ago.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-South Carolina, said Sunday that it was “disturbing” to hear the FBI downplay the link to antisemitism. “I hope the FBI will reconsider the statement because it is well known that at her trial Siddiqui, also known as ‘Lady al-Qaeda,’ was a raging anti-Semite who demanded that jurors be genetically tested for Jewish blood,” Graham tweeted. “This statement by the FBI seems illconceived and ill-timed.”
The Anti-Defamation League applauded the FBI’s efforts but also asked that the connection to antisemitism be fully investigated.
“There is no doubt, given what we know so far, that the hostage-taker chose his target carefully,” the league said in a statement. “We urge law enforcement and prosecutors to investigate the role antisemitism may have played in motivating the suspect.”
In its latest statement, the FBI also referred to its protracted negotiations with Akram who “spoke repeatedly” about Siddiqui. She was detained in 2008 by Afghan authorities who found notes referring to a “mass casualty attack” possibly targeting New York. When U.S. officials attempted to interview Siddiqui in Ghazni, Afghanistan, she seized an Army officer’s weapon and shot at an officer and other members of the interview team.