Two Jewish men were stabbed in Golders Green on Wednesday, April 29, in an attack that police later declared a terrorist incident, deepening alarm in a north London community already rattled by a recent run of antisemitic cases. The victims, aged 34 and 76, were taken to hospital after the morning attack and were reported to be in stable condition. A 45-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder.
According to police and community accounts carried by multiple outlets, the suspect was seen on Golders Green Road armed with a knife and allegedly tried to stab other members of the public before he was stopped. Reports said he was detained with the help of local Jewish security volunteers and then arrested by officers, who used a stun gun during the confrontation. Counter-terror officers are now leading the investigation and examining whether the Jewish community was specifically targeted.
That question matters a lot in Golders Green, where many Jewish families live and where nerves were already frayed. In recent weeks, investigators have also been dealing with suspected antisemitic arson attacks in the area, including a fire linked to a memorial wall on Limes Avenue and an earlier arson attack on volunteer ambulances used by the Jewish community. Both cases have been handled by Counter Terror Policing.
The stabbing quickly drew condemnation from political and community leaders. Prime Minister Keir Starmer described attacks on the Jewish community as attacks on Britain, while London Mayor Sadiq Khan and Jewish leaders also condemned the violence and called for firm action. The response was swift, but it also reflected something more troubling: officials and community groups are no longer treating these incidents as isolated flashes of hatred. They are looking at a pattern.
For residents in Golders Green, that broader pattern is the real story hanging over this attack. Jewish charities and security groups have been on edge, not just because of this stabbing, but because of the sense that hostility has been getting bolder, more public and more dangerous. Wednesday’s violence, in that context, landed as more than a crime scene. It felt like another escalation.
Police said inquiries are continuing, and investigators are working to establish motive, timeline and any wider links. For now, the two men injured in the attack are alive and stable. But in Golders Green, that will do little to quiet the fear that has been building there for weeks.
