Thursday, January 22, 2026
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Bondi Attack: Matilda's Parents Praise Mystery Woman Who Saved Younger Daughter

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
January 18, 20264 days ago
Parents of Bondi victim Matilda pay tribute to mystery woman who saved their younger daughter

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Parents of Bondi attack victim Matilda, aged 10, paid tribute to a mystery woman who shielded their younger daughter, Summer. The woman, later identified as Tash Willemsen, saved Summer from the line of fire. The parents are advocating for a bridge to be painted yellow, Matilda's favorite color, as a memorial, and for the park to be renamed Matilda's Park.

Valentyna Poltavchenko still remembers the surge of panic when she realised she couldn't see her two young daughters as gunshots rang out at Bondi Beach. Moments earlier, she had watched Matilda, aged 10, and her six-year-old sister Summer walking hand in hand towards the petting zoo at the Chanukah by the Sea celebration on December 14. The sisters were inseparable and had spent the afternoon having their faces painted, playing with bubbles and eating sweet treats. As the sun dipped towards the horizon and families gathered for the lighting of the Chanukah candle, the girls told their parents they wanted to wander a short distance away to pat the animals. Then the first shots were fired. "I thought it was firecrackers," Ms Poltavchenko recalled. "I told Michael, what a bad joke, someone wants to scare us. In the confusion that followed, Ms Poltavchenko searched the crowd but the girls were nowhere to be seen. Ms Poltavchenko's husband, Michael Britvan, was the one who found Matilda first. She was lying injured, still wearing her yellow sundress. "I was trying to stay low because I could hear the bullets were just flying," Mr Britvan said. "I could hear her screaming, and I screamed something like 'Matilda get down', and I started to crawl to where she was. When I got there, she was already hurt. Within minutes, an off-duty doctor and a paramedic, both in swimmers and fresh from the ocean, rushed to help. As emergency crews worked on Matilda, Mr Britvan continued searching desperately for Summer. He eventually found the six-year-old unharmed, in the arms of a woman with bright red hair who was sheltering behind a ute. "I just said 'Thank you'," he recalled. "I said 'I'm sorry, her sister is injured' we have to go'." In the hours that followed, both parents clung to the hope that their eldest daughter would survive her injuries. "We were still full of hope that she will manage, she will make it. Then the doctors came out and asked us to sit down with them," Mr Britvan said. 'A regular Aussie girl' One month after the Bondi terror attack, the heartbroken parents of the youngest victim have given their first sit-down interview. They described Matilda as a "softie" who loved animals, practised judo and rarely wanted to be apart from her little sister. She had recently mastered cartwheels and the splits and proudly practised them at home. Ms Poltavchenko and Mr Britvan both moved to Australia separately from Ukraine and met in Sydney through social media. They chose the name Matilda because it sounded unmistakably Australian. Their younger daughter, Summer, was named after the great Australian summer. Both parents have requested the ABC identify Summer because they say Matilda's story is strongly tied to her sister's legacy. "At school they called them twins, even though there was three years between them in age," Ms Poltavchenko said. In the weeks since the attack, Summer has been plagued by nightmares. She witnessed her older sister being shot. "She dreams about shootings everywhere, in the local park, at school … in one of her dreams Matilda got shot but survived, but [Summer] was killed," Ms Poltavchenko said. The woman with red hair For weeks, the parents did not know the identity of the red-haired woman who shielded Summer behind a ute on the day of the shooting. They believe she saved their younger daughter's life because Summer would otherwise have run after her sister and into the line of fire. After a public call out, the woman was identified as Tash Willemsen after her stepfather recognised her in an online post. Ms Willemsen had been running the petting zoo at the festival with her mother Ally and stepfather Dave when the shooting began. Her mother, who was grazed by a bullet in the back, also shielded a young girl who had become separated from their parents. Summer and Ms Willemsen were reunited at a vigil for the Bondi victims earlier this month. "She not only hid a child, physically protected her, but she was comforting her, telling her 'it's okay, it's a firework, let's pet the rabbit'," Ms Poltavchenko said. Ms Willemsen said she acted on pure instinct, pulling in two girls, including Summer and a young man with a disability, and holding them closely until the shooting subsided. The two now share a bond understood only by them. A yellow bridge as a memorial As Waverley Council debates the future of the footbridge used by the Bondi gunmen, both parents said it should remain as a permanent reminder of the violence that took their daughter's life. They have suggested painting the bridge yellow in honour of the dress Matilda wore on her final day and installing a plaque to commemorate the 15 victims of the attack. "I want it in place so people can go on it and look at the park from the highest point and feel the pain that was just in front of them," Ms Poltavchenko said. The couple have also expressed support for renaming the park where the festival was held as Matilda's Park. The family only recently returned to their Sydney apartment, unable to bear being at home without their eldest daughter. Summer refused to sleep in the bedroom she shared with Matilda and instead sleeps beside her parents. Slowly, the family are working through the events of December 14 as they try to preserve the memory of their daughter. "I used to say 'she's the most beautiful, the smartest girl' ... she was very special to me," Mr Britvan said.

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    Bondi Victim Matilda's Parents Thank Hero Woman