SAN BERNARDINO, California — It’s a miracle that Anies Kondoker survived. She had already been shot three times — once in each arm, another time in the stomach. Two more shots could have easily ended her life.
Instead, the bullets whizzed above her head, sinking deep into the wall behind her.
Kondoker survived what has been deemed the deadliest shooting since 20 schoolchildren and seven adults were murdered in cold blood in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012. But what makes Kondoker unique isn’t just that she shared the same workplace as one of the alleged gunmen in the San Bernardino shooting, Syed Rizwan Farook — they shared the same prayer space, too.
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Religion is now getting drawn into the mystery behind the motive in the attack as federal authorities have come forward with new information that Farook had recently become “radicalized,” and his new wife, Tashfeen Malik, had pledged her support to ISIS.
Muslim leaders have fiercely condemned the massacre and reaffirmed that Islam does not profess violence. And they’re well-aware that pre-existing fears and stereotypes in the U.S. don’t help that cause. They’re left now with the same burning question that all Americans are asking: How could this have happened here?
Standing in the same mosque where the alleged shooter was known to pray, Kondoker’s husband, Salihin, expressed little doubt over how to both define the horrific slayings and differentiate them from the traditional teachings of Islam.
“This is definitely [an] act of terrorism — killing innocent human beings,” he told the congregation after prayer at the Islamic Center of Riverside on Friday afternoon.
Like many in the mosque who said they knew Farook, Kondoker described his wife’s shock that the alleged killer was seemingly an extremist hiding in plain sight. Farook and Malik were both killed in a shoot-out with police after their violent rampage left 14 dead and 21 wounded.
“There were no signs from this fellow worker he would do this heinous crime,” he said. “Nobody from the office ever noticed this person’s behavior, demeanor, that could lead into violent act.”
With many questions still unanswered that could speak to how the newlywed couple believed to have perpetrated Wednesday’s attack could turn so swiftly to violence, having turned their garage into a bomb-making factory, community members are still grappling over whether they missed any warning signs.
“We’re still coming to grips with how this could happen here,” said Omar Zaki, spokesperson for the Islamic Center.
Arab-Americans were already on high alert after a series of horrific terrorist attacks in Paris worked to shatter a global sense of security. With ISIS claiming credit for that massacre, Islamophobia escalated to new heights in the U.S., stoked in part by politicians whose campaigns built on the general public’s fear of terrorism on American soil.









