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Sons laud security guard dad in San Diego who saved children from mosque attackers

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By Arafat Barbakh

SAN DIEGO, May ‌21 (Reuters) - The sons of a security guard killed while protecting children at ​the Islamic Center of San Diego remembered their father as a hero who died as he lived - putting others first.

Police ⁠say Amin Abdullah, 51, a security guard at the largest mosque in San Diego County, sacrificed his life to keep 140 children inside the mosque school safe by engaging two gunmen in a ​shootout and transmitting the radio call that activated a security lockdown. Mosque elder Mansour Kaziha, 78, and Uber driver Nadir Awad, 57, a neighbor whose ‌wife is a teacher at the mosque school, were also shot and killed in what is being investigated as a hate crime.

Funerals for the three are to be held on Thursday.

“When I learned about ⁠it … I couldn’t believe it. It didn’t feel real. I was just in shock,” ⁠Muhammad Amin Abdullah, 28, said on Wednesday. “But when I learned that his actions saved all the kids … I felt proud, and I felt comfort because I know that’s exactly how my dad would have wanted to go out - protecting people.”

He and his brothers Jibreel and Khaled spoke to Reuters as ‌they accepted condolences at their father's home, describing him as their best friend and a pillar of ⁠the community. 

Khaled, 24, said his family has drawn strength from the ‌way he died.

“The fact that he was on the front line, ​trying to defend kids and innocent people, that makes me feel good,” Khaled said. “Calling him a hero is the least we can do.”

Jibreel, 21, described his father as “the kindest person you’d meet.”

“Ask anyone … ‌they’d have nothing but good things to say about my dad,” ​he said. “Best dad you could ask for.”

The ⁠family urged others to honor their father by living with compassion and a sense ‌of service.

“Live your life serving others … and just be ⁠kind to everybody,” Muhammad said. “The world would definitely be a better place if people lived like that.”

Their sister, Hawaa, made a similar plea on Tuesday. She told reporters their father "stood against any form ​of hate."

Police and FBI have said ‌that they are investigating the attack as a hate crime but have not offered details about the ⁠possible motive of the attackers, who took their ​own lives shortly after the shooting.

(Reporting by Arafat Barbakh in San Diego; writing by Daniel ​Trotta; editing by Donna Bryson and Lincoln Feast.)

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