As bullets sprayed Bondi beach, Chaya Dadon heard a desperate call for help.
A woman pleaded with the 14-year-old to take her children amid the unfolding horror on Sunday evening. Chaya rushed out from a bench she had been sheltering under with a friend.
Laying her body on top of the two younger children, Chaya shielded them as gunmen carried out Australia’s worst terrorist attack, targeted at a joyous Hanukah celebration.
Moments later, Chaya was shot in the leg.
As Australia’s Jewish community begins funerals for the victims of the antisemitic mass shooting, Chaya is recovering in hospital.
Her grandfather, Rabbi Yaakov Lieder, describes seeing a video of Chaya protecting the two children on social media.
“She is not giving up,” he says. “Her instinct is to save lives while these terrorists are killing people. What a contrast.”
Lieder describes his granddaughter as “sensitive” and a “gentle soul”.
“She always wants to make sure that nobody gets hurt,” he says.
Lieder says his granddaughter would frequently ask him: “What can I do to help you?”
“When she sees people get together she always wants to make peace,” he says.
Chaya, Lieder says, personifies the meaning of her name – life.
“She always wants to make people happy.”
Lieder says the woman who pleaded for help was also shot in the attack but his family has been unable to identify her or the two children Chaya protected.
The terrorists killed 15 people, with 41 – including four children – taken to hospitals across Sydney after the attack. As of Wednesday evening, 17 patients were hospitalised and being treated for their injuries.
Lieder’s nephew Rabbi Eli Schlanger was killed in the attack on Sunday. At his funeral on Wednesday, Rabbi Aron Moss said Schlanger had been “ripped away from us, doing what he loved best”.
“Spreading love and joy and caring for his people with endless self-sacrifice in his life and in his death, he towered above as one of the highest and holiest souls,” he said.
“This loss is massive for the entire Jewish nation but, for our community here, and for Chabad of Bondi, the loss is unspeakable.”
Lieder was on his way to Bondi beach for Sunday’s Hanukah celebration when his grandson warned him about the shootings.
He says he would never have believed in his “wildest imagination” that one of Australia’s most famous destinations would become a site of terrorism.
The community’s response to the atrocity, he says, will “show the world the contrast between people who want life, life is the most sacred thing to them, and people who want to destroy life”.