The song remains the same. Massacre. Shouts of “Allahu Akbar”. And police searching for the motive. But at least this time there’s a happy ending courtesy of a personal trainer and his squat stick.
A knife-wielding assailant stabbed and killed a man in the Dutch port city of Rotterdam on Thursday night before he was overpowered by police and bystanders, police said.
Another person was injured in the incident, and the suspected attacker was hurt as he was subdued and arrested.
Witnesses told Dutch broadcaster NOS that the suspect shouted “Allahu Akbar” (“Allah is Greater than Non-Muslim Religions” in Arabic) during the attack.
Police did not confirm this and said they were investigating the motive behind the assault.
It’s a mystery. Just like the 300 other Muslim knife attacks across Europe accompanied by shouts of “Allah is Greater Than Your Religion.” But if the record holds, the motive will prove to be mental illness brought on by marijuana and lack of integration.
“The suspect was overpowered and arrested by bystanders and police officers”, a police statement said. Mostly one bystander.
De Telegraaf newspaper reported that a personal trainer who had been giving an outdoor class knocked the suspect unconscious with a squat stick that he had broken in two, and other bystanders threw chairs at him.
[The Trainer] Litecia ran over to calm the fight down. “When I got closer, I saw that he had very large knives, he was covered in blood and he was screaming. There were other people nearby who were trying to help the victim.”
Litecia went back to warn other people. “I told my client to go upstairs and get safe and call the police. And then I went to Remastered, because there was a party there with about 60, 70 older people. They were standing outside. I told them there was a guy coming and stabbing everyone, and they just looked at me.”
“When they realized it, they went in through just one door and that perpetrator went after him and I thought, oh, this is going to get worse.”
He went to see if his client was safe, but came back anyway. “You know, I see those employees there every day. I’ve been coming there for a year, I see everyone open and close. And I saw elderly people outside who were completely unaware of what was going on.”
Bystanders had cornered the attacker by now and were holding him back with chairs and tables. “I saw that they had him in a corner inside, but he wanted to get out. I was standing at the door and I thought: the only way is to just go down right there.
He was shouting all sorts of things, he was cursing, in Arabic I think. Also in my face. We looked into each other’s eyes and he was praying at that moment I think, to his god. But I saw nothing in his eyes, there was no life in them.
But the trainer makes a very important point.
He himself lost his younger brother in a stabbing fifteen years ago. “Since then, life has changed for all of us. It’s about self-protection, you know.” He draws strength from his faith in God. “I have a lot to lose,” he says emotionally. “I think God put me in this position yesterday, knowing that I would intervene.”
But the suspect also referred to God when he committed his actions. “That is not the same God,” says [the trainer]. “That is unfortunately also a side of this story. It is now going to be said that it is because of that God, but the God that I have met and that I follow, he is also on this side. It is one heart, all people, one head, all weapons.”
https://www.frontpagemag.com/personal-trainer-defeats-allah-in-muslim-terror-attack/