A quiet Monday morning exploded into terror. Gunfire shattered the stillness of a San Diego mosque, children running, parents screaming into their phones,
the world tilting in a single, violent minute. Sirens drowned out prayers. Streets locked down. A security guard dead, two gunmen lifeless,
and dozens of families trapped in a nightmare of waiting—waiting for names, for answers, for the one message that says their child is al… Continues…
They will remember the sounds first: the sharp cracks echoing off tiled floors, the sudden stampede of feet, the choked orders to
“Get down!” and “Run!” Parents arrived to a maze of police tape and roadblocks, forced to stand behind barricades while officers swept classrooms and prayer rooms.
Every child led out with hands shaking and eyes wide became a fragile miracle, every delay another stab of dread for those still waiting.
By midday, the chaos gave way to a heavy, stunned quiet. Grief gathered around the body of the fallen guard, hailed as the one who absorbed the first wave of
violence so others could escape. Inside the community, fear now mingles with defiance: imams leading prayers through tears, neighbors
bringing food, strangers offering rides home. Answers will come slowly, but the demand is immediate—how many times must a sanctuary become a targ