On May 18, dozens of Arabs approached a table where four men were sitting at the Sushi Fumi restaurant in LA and asked “Who’s Jewish?” before violently attacking them, throwing glass bottles at them, spraying them with pepper spray, and beating them up. Three days later, the police, assisted by the US. Marshal Service, arrested the main suspect of the attack on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon. The incident is being investigated as a hate crime by the LAPD. Three of the victims were Iranian American Jews but the fourth victim, Mher, is not Jewish. Jewish Journal spoke to Mher, an Armenian-Lebanese Christian who is being hailed as a hero for defending his Jewish friends. For safety reasons, he asked to be identified only by his first name. “I feel pain everywhere in my body,” Mher, 36, said. “They beat me in my shoulders, stomach, back, and my ribs, which especially hurt. My head has a big bump. It makes sense since four people beat me. And it’s been hard to sleep; I only slept two hours in the last 48 hours. I keep seeing everything that happened again and again, and I dream about what happened. And I keep asking myself, ‘Maybe I could have done more?’” Mher, who works as a photographer, was out for dinner with two of his clients who became his friends, along with one of their friends, and they saw cars approaching with Palestinian flags. “I assumed my Jewish friends were targeted because we were in a pretty Jewish area [Beverly Grove],” Mher said. “The men started cursing against Israel. They yelled, ‘You guys are killing children! You’re raping our women! You have to feel ashamed of yourselves!” “Then they started throwing bottles. We got lucky because one of my friends was sitting in front of me. I saw one guy throwing the bottle and it almost hit my friend in the head. I myself have cuts, probably from the glass.” “And then, one of them said, ‘Who’s Jewish?’ I knew they could be violent, so I came closer to them and started speaking in Arabic.” “I said, ‘You want to protest? Protest peacefully. We’re having dinner. We’re not in a war zone.’ But they didn’t respond. I went closer to them and asked them not to throw glasses. Then, two guys jumped out of a car and ran toward me. I yelled in Arabic, ‘Chill out!’ One of them heard me speaking Arabic and seemed to calm down. Then, I saw about 15 people coming toward me. That was not a situation that I could control by speaking Arabic. A big guy threw a bottle at me and tried to punch me. When I saw that they were beating one of my friends on the floor and kicking him in the head, I knew I had to do something, so I grabbed a stanchion and tried to scare them away. We got my friend off the floor, but four of the men started beating me.” Mher said that he’s not a hero and he was just there at the right time to protect his friends. “If I would be called a loyal friend, it would be better than being called a hero. I was invited to speak at a synagogue this [coming] […]

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