Final Prayer Held in San Diego for Victims of Mosque Attack
A large gathering took place in San Diego to honor three men killed in a mosque shooting. Mourners recited funeral prayers and remembered the victims as heroes. (sources: nytimes, aljazeera)
Over 2,000 people attended a memorial service in San Diego for three men who were killed in a shooting at a mosque. The community came together to mourn and pay tribute to the victims.
- The shooting occurred at the Islamic Center of San Diego.
- Thousands of mourners participated in the funeral prayer.
- The victims were commemorated as heroes during the memorial.
Why it matters
The event highlights community responses to violence and the impact of such tragedies on local populations.
↓ Why this is on ModernAction
3 bills on this issue are moving right now — and the most active one is Pray Safe Act of 2025.
H.R.5645 · 119th Congress
Pray Safe Act of 2025
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What H.R.5645 actually does
This story is about Final Prayer Held in San Diego for Victims of Mosque Attack. This bill would victims: Create a DHS clearinghouse of evidence-based security best practices for nonprofits/faith-based groups/houses of worship.
If passed, it would:
- Create a DHS clearinghouse of evidence-based security best practices for nonprofits/faith-based groups/houses of • Centralize information on federal grant programs that would fund safety and security improvements.
2 other bills moving on this issue
Take action on any of them individually.
This story is about Final Prayer Held in San Diego for Victims of Mosque Attack. This bill would After an attack on a mosque, communities often look to the Nonprofit Security Grant Program (NSGP) to fund target-hardening; this bill focus.
If passed, it would
- Require additional reporting to Congress around NSGP grant-making • Increase visibility into application/award patterns to support oversight and improvements.
This story is about Final Prayer Held in San Diego for Victims of Mosque Attack. This bill would victims: Create a DOJ method to evaluate whether jurisdictions are credibly reporting hate-crime data.
If passed, it would
- Create a DOJ method to evaluate whether jurisdictions are credibly reporting hate-crime data • Tie certain grant eligibility/penalties to hate-crime reporting performance (with an exception pathway.
