Subhead:At Bondi Beach, Avi Yemini spoke with Rabbi Pinny Super as his family lives through the unthinkable after the terror attack.#
YouTube-embed:cNIeW_kebnI
I’ve known Rabbi Pinny Super for years. This isn’t an abstract tragedy. This is close. This is family. I spoke with him outside the Bondi Pavilion, metres from where the Chanukah gathering was turned into a horrific crime scene
Pinny told me his brother had attended the event “to be standby paramedic in case of emergency” and instead “ended up getting hit”. He was shot twice. “One bullet went into his deep and the other,” he said, still trying to make sense of it. His brother has been in ICU since Sunday night.
Pauline Hanson quietly attended the Bondi terror attack memorial to pay her respects. What followed was an emotional reception that spoke volumes.
👉 https://t.co/Z5GvPbQWps pic.twitter.com/1o2qSPsQJo
— Avi Yemini (@OzraeliAvi) December 16, 2025
Those first hours were pure terror. Pinny described waiting for news, not knowing if his parents were “going to Sydney to bury their son or to help their son recover”. He said, “The panic was insane. I mean, I can’t describe you the feeling. Like, my body was shaking.” Friends refused to leave him alone until they knew his brother was alive.


