SHARE
COPY LINK

ISLAM

Father of Vienna attack hero: ‘Our religion says to help others’

When Osama Abu El Hosna found himself under a hail of bullets during the shooting rampage in Vienna, he heroically risked his life to save a policeman at the scene.

Father of Vienna attack hero: 'Our religion says to help others'
Inhabitants light candles in front of Saint Rupert's Church, one of the scenes of the Vienna attack. Photo: Barbara Gindl/AFP
But while Hosna has been lauded for his courage, other Muslims say they are now scared to walk the streets of the city they call home as they fear a backlash against their community.
   
Monday’s attack was carried out by an Islamic State supporter who had been convicted and imprisoned for trying to join the IS group in Syria.
 
Hosna’s own story is testament to the Islamophobia present in many parts of Austrian society — and which has been fanned by right-wing politicians.
 
   
In the majority Catholic country, half of Austrians believe mosques should not be tolerated and say they have a negative image of Muslims, according to a 2019 study by the University of Salzburg.
   
Muslims make up eight percent of the population, one of the highest proportions in the European Union. 
   
The far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) openly uses Islamophobic and racist imagery, including during its spell in government between late 2017 and May last year.
   
According to the Dokustelle group, which documents anti-Muslim harassment and racism, incidents targeting Muslims went up from 309 in 2017 to 1,051 in 2019.
   
The NGO also reports an increase in anti-Muslim incidents in the wake of the Vienna attack, including buildings being defaced with slurs.
   
“So many women have been calling because they are too afraid to go outside, because they get harassed for wearing a headscarf,” said Dokustelle founder Elif Adam.
 
READ ALSO: 
 
 
‘It may rebound on us’
 
Addressing hundreds of Muslims gathered for Friday prayers at the Islamic Centre Vienna which houses the city’s main mosque, the imam condemned any form of violence as contradicting the principles of Islam, and urged parents to
watch out for extremists trying to radicalise their children.
   
Prayers at mosques across Austria were offered for the victims of the attack, carried out by a 20-year-old jihadist with dual Austrian and Macedonian nationality.
   
“Anyone who is doing such an act is not acceptable, and we cannot consider him as a friend of Islam,” Ahmed Al Mofareh, the director of the Islamic Centre Vienna, told AFP.
   
The gunman “didn’t understand our religion but I am worried that this will rebound on us,” worshipper Ahmed, who did not want to give his surname, told AFP on his way out of the mosque.
   
Hosna’s proud father Khalid said it was his son’s actions that were the true reflection of Islamic values.
   
“Our culture, our religion and doctrine say we have to help others,” he told AFP. “It’s the least we can do for Austria.”
   
Osama himself, 23, proudly sports a sew-on police patch gifted to him by colleagues of the injured officer he helped save.
 
   
Despite being urged by another police officer to run and save himself, Hosna pressed his grey T-shirt onto the gunshot wound on the injured policeman’s thigh and helped drag him to an ambulance.
   
He identified himself and those being shot at as fellow Muslims and tried to speak to the attacker in Arabic in an attempt to stop the shooting spree.
   
TV stations across the world have contacted the young man, who recently got engaged, to recall the events.
   
The family is originally from the Gaza Strip and Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has called Osama to congratulate him.
 
‘They didn’t want us’
 
But they are no strangers to discrimination.
   
Osama himself recalls quitting his job as an electrician because he was bullied for having the same first name as late Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
   
The family of 11 were also featured in media reports last year.
   
Back then, the family combined their income and savings to buy a home in the small village of Weikendorf, about an hour from Vienna.
   
The mayor, however, objected, citing the “different cultures of the Islamic and the Western world” which “are far apart in terms of values, customs and traditions”.
   
It took a year-long legal battle to finally purchase the house.
   
But in the end, the family decided to rent it out and instead stay in an apartment in Vienna — for fear of living among people who “didn’t want us because we are a Muslim family”, Abu El Hosna said.
   
Still, his father said, they don’t want to judge the entire community by the actions of a few individuals.
   
“There are radicals everywhere,” he said.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

TERRORISM

What is the risk of new terror attacks in Austria?

Following the March 22nd attack in Moscow’s Crocus City Hall that left over 140 dead, European governments are evaluating the threat of terror attacks. Is Austria a target for fresh terrorist attacks?

What is the risk of new terror attacks in Austria?

With responsibility for the Moscow attack being taken by the Islamist terror organisation ISIS-K, national intelligence services are reevaluating the threat posed to targets within their borders. 

‘No concrete threat’

Austrian officials have been quick to give their appraisal of the situation. 

“We currently have the Islamist scene under control,” stressed Omar Haijawi-Pirchner, head of the Directorate of State Security & Intelligence (DSN) – the governmental agency responsible for combatting internal threats – in an interview with the Ö1 Morgenjournal radio programme on Tuesday. 

He continued: “The terrorist attacks in Moscow, for example, definitely increase the risk. But at the moment, we do not see any concrete threat of an attack in Austria,”

Other experts and officials have warned that while there are no concrete threats, Austrians should not be complacent. 

‘Situation is still valid’ 

Interior Minister Gerhard Karner announced tighter security at church festivals during the Easter period, in the days after the attack, and stressed that the high terror alert level introduced after the October 7 Hamas attacks was still in place. 

“This increased risk situation is still valid,” noted Karner.

READ MORE: What does Austria’s raised terror alert mean for the public?

Meanwhile, terror researcher Peter Neumann of King’s College London told ORF’s ‘ZiB 2’ news broadcast on Monday that Austria remains a potential target due to its Central Asian migrant population. 

Neumann noted that countries at most risk are those “in which Tajik and Central Asian diasporas exist and where ISIS-K finds it relatively easy to identify and recruit people”. 

He continued, identifying both Austria and Germany as “countries in which the ISPK is particularly active and which are particularly at risk from terrorist attacks”.

New threats

Austria has not been spared from attacks from homegrown terrorists.

On November 2nd 2020, amid Coronavirus lockdowns, Austrian-born Kujtim Fejzulai shot and killed four, injuring twenty-three others during a shooting spree across Vienna. He was ultimately shot dead by police. 

Fejzulai was already under surveillance by federal authorities for his beliefs and had been released from prison on parole less than a year before. 

SHOW COMMENTS