Stark and unflinching interview
Son of Hamas Tells Piers Morgan: "Ahmed Al Ahmed Didn't Act as a Muslim when he Saved Jews on Bondi Beach" | WATCH
Former Hamas insider Mosab Hassan Yousef praised Ahmed Al Ahmed, the Muslim bystander who heroically disarmed a Bondi Beach gunman despite being shot, calling the act “pure humanity.” But Yousef also delivered a warning, arguing that Islamist identity is often exploited by jihadists even he says that most Muslims reject violence.

Mosab Hassan Yousef, the son of a Hamas co-founder who defected to Israel and renounced Islamist extremism, described the deadly shooting at Bondi Beach as the inevitable result of years of global indoctrination and demonization of Jews.
The attack on December 14, during a Hanukkah celebration at Archer Park near the iconic beach, claimed 15 lives, including a 10-year-old girl and two rabbis, and wounded dozens more. Australian authorities identified the perpetrators as a father-son duo, Sajid Akram, 50, and Naveed Akram, 24, motivated by Islamic State ideology. Homemade ISIS flags were found in their vehicle, and the younger suspect had prior scrutiny from security agencies over extremist links.
Appearing on Piers Morgan Uncensored shortly after the tragedy, Yousef called the incident "horrible" and a direct outcome of "two years of hateful indoctrination, demonizing the Jews, dehumanizing and delegitimizing Israel."
"This has been a jihad campaign against the Jewish minority, and most people are in denial," Yousef said. He traced the surge in antisemitic violence to narratives that emerged after October 7, 2023, accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza despite what he described as its defensive actions against Hamas.
"False narratives were built... that led to the hatred against the Jewish people. It led to the Sydney attack... and it will lead to more attacks," he warned, pointing to calls to "globalize the intifada" as code for exporting violence to cities like Sydney, New York, and Los Angeles.Yousef drew parallels to his own life: his father, a Hamas founder, expected him to follow in his footsteps as a terrorist, but he rejected that path after witnessing the movement's brutality.
Born in a mosque, raised devoutly, and educated in Sharia law, Yousef eventually abandoned Islam, viewing it as a "dead end" leading to endless violence.
He praised the heroism of Ahmed Al Ahmed, a Muslim bystander who tackled one of the gunmen, disarming him despite being shot multiple times. "In that moment, he dropped all his identity... He was pure humanity," Yousef said, arguing that true courage transcends religious or ethnic labels.Yet Yousef was uncompromising on the broader issue: while the vast majority of Muslims are peaceful, identifying with Islam provides cover for jihadists.
"The problem is with jihad itself," he asserted, a concept unique to Islam that demands sacrifice for a global caliphate.
He urged Muslims, especially in the West, to reform or abandon outdated seventh-century doctrines that cannot integrate into modern societies. Judaism, he noted, has reformed its ancient texts to eliminate violence, something Islam has resisted amid accusations of Islamophobia."The vast majority of Muslims don't want violence, this is human nature," Yousef acknowledged, but warned that clinging to identity over humanity enables extremists. "Before they are Muslims, they are humans. We are all children of God."
Yousef dismissed his own past baptism as symbolic and said he no longer identifies as Christian, influenced instead by universal principles of love and forgiveness. Holidays like Christmas hold no rigid meaning for him, he celebrates life and humanity.
As Australia mourns and tightens security around Jewish sites, Yousef's words serve as a grave reminder: unchecked radical narratives breed real-world terror, and only confronting ideological roots can prevent future tragedies. The Bondi attack, he said, is not an isolated event but a warning of what unchecked hatred can unleash worldwide.