When Friday March 15 2019 began they were 10 everyday New Zealanders.
They said goodbye to their families, they went to work, they gathered for weekly prayers.
And then just before 2pm they faced the unthinkable and they became heroes, putting their own lives on the line to save others - many others - as a terrorist unleashed on the Christchurch Muslim community.
Without their actions during the Christchurch terror attack many more lives would have been lost, many more families would have been torn apart by the terrorist's bullets.
The 10 are all recipients of the 2021 New Zealand Bravery Awards.
Here are their stories.
Naeem Rashid: The hero who rushed the terrorist
Dr Naeem Rashid and his sons arrived at the Al Noor Mosque for Friday prayer and less than 10 minutes after they entered the main congregation room the massacre began.
A lone gunman armed with high powered firearms was shooting indiscriminately at worshippers. Men. Women. Children.
As he made his way to the main room, terrified worshippers began to flee including Rashid.
Someone broke the lower pane of a small window and several people were able to escape, but others could not and a bottleneck developed.
Rashid was at the back of the group, who were all exposed to the gunman's line of fire.
The killer began firing shots into a large group of men on the other side of the room and Rashid took action.
"In a situation of extreme danger, Dr Rashid displayed great courage and bravery in challenging the gunman, with complete disregard for his own safety," his citation reads.
"In so doing, he selflessly enabled others to escape, at the cost of his own life. Without Dr Rashid's brave actions, the loss of life on 15 March 2019 would have been even greater."
His wife Ambreen Naeem said she was grateful for the "special honour" which is the highest civil award for bravery.
"Naeem was a brave man, he was kind and loving," she said.
"He was a true follower of the peaceful faith of Islam, which is the complete code of life.
"Throughout his life, he always put others before him. On 15th March 2019, in those difficult circumstances, knowing the consequences, he tackled hate. By doing so he took an eternal life.
He pulled the man between two cars to shelter him from the gunman and applied a trauma bandage to his bullet wounds.
Beale then moved along the road to other victims, assessing the severity of their injuries, applying initial first aid, and moving those where he could to less exposed positions.
He came across a little girl lying face down on the footpath. She had been shot multiple times.
He ran back to the car to get his last bandage and once he had pressed it onto her wounds, he picked the child up and ran her down the road where others could assist him.
He warned them that the gunman was either still nearby or active and that an ambulance would not be able to get in unless police could secure the scene.
Another bystander ran and got his ute and Beale started lifting victims onto the back.
He then called emergency services, telling them that it was on its way out of the scene, that the people on the back needed urgent medical attention.
As they were trucked out, Beale stayed at the scene - helping more victims and the police as they converged.
Beale received the New Zealand Bravery Decoration for his act of exceptional bravery in a situation of danger.
"He placed his own life at risk, bravely searching for victims, assisting them and moving them to safety, while the gunman was active in the area," his citation read.
Lance Bradford: The hero who drove the wounded
The gunman ran out of ammunition inside Al Noor and returned to his car to get more.
As he made his way back to continue his deadly spree he fired multiple shots along both directions of the street.
At one point the mass murderer fired 27 shots in one direction.
Lance Bradford was driving his ute along Deans Ave at the time and as he neared Al Noor he could not believe his eyes.
He could see eight to 10 people lying on the ground outside the mosque, in distress and clearly wounded.
He pulled over immediately and walked back towards the mosque.
As he made his way to the victims Bradford could hear the sounds of gunshots and people screaming.
He knew he had to do something to stop anyone else going near and he began stopping members of the public - who were seemingly unaware of the unfolding situation - from heading in the direction of the mosque.
He then drove the victims to the Christchurch Hospital emergency department.
Bradford received The New Zealand Bravery Medal for his act of bravery.
Mike Robinson: The hero who helped and helped
Mike Robinson was driving along Deans Ave with a colleague at 1.40pm when the carnage began to unfold.
The pair observed the gunman firing a weapon and people falling over in the grounds of the mosque.
Robinson's swung their vehicle across the lanes at the end of a traffic island and together they began directing traffic to turn around.
They then turned their attention to the victims - they could see people lying on the road and the footpath near the mosque so they headed towards them.
They came across several victims who had been shot, and provided assistance to them.
Robinson pulled a gunshot victim to shelter between parked cars then proceeded as close as possible to the mosque, but found no further victims and returned to the others.
By then he could see ambulances waiting at a cordon point on Deans Ave.
He and the other rescuers knew police could not let the paramedics in until they had secured the scene, until they had the shooter contained.
Robinson and his colleague started to help load victims into Bradford's ute.
They then remained at the scene helping other victims until the ambulances were allowed into the horrifying scene.
Robinson is the recipient of The New Zealand Bravery Medal for an act of bravery.
He spoke briefly about the honour, saying March 15, 2019, was "the darkest day I have ever faced.".
"After receiving news that I had been nominated for this award, I took some time to reflect upon my actions that day and some deep consideration on whether I should accept," he said.
"I have decided to accept this not for my actions that day but for the people that didn't survive and for those that did.
"I do not consider myself a hero just an average Joe who happened to be in the wrong place at the right time or the right place at the wrong time whichever way you choose to look."
Wayne Maley: The hero who stopped traffic
As Wayne Maley and his colleague drove down Deans Ave they could hear gunshots coming from the Al Noor Mosque.
They could see a gunman firing a weapon and people falling over in the grounds.
They could also see people falling over on the footpath.
Maley realised the severity of the situation immediately - and could see cars on the other side of the road heading directly towards the mosque and into danger
He swung his vehicle across the lanes at the end of a traffic island, and with his colleague began directing traffic to turn around.
Maley then raced to help the injured, helping to load victims into vehicles bound for the cordon where ambulances were waiting to take them to hospital.
He and his colleague stayed to help until the police allowed the ambulance crews through to the scene.
Maley received the New Zealand Bravery Medal for his act of bravery and said he was "quite honoured" when he heard the news.
He had trained in CPR and remembers being told at the course "one day you'll come across somebody and just stop and help".
"I didn't really care for my safety, I could hear the guy up the road shooting, I just felt we had to go and help these people," he told NZME.
The honour was a form of "closure" for Maley who has had counselling after the terror attack and has been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Maley said he has never met any of the survivors and would dearly like to.
He recalled holding his hand over one man's wound waiting for paramedics and pulling his phone out of his pocket for him so he could speak to family.
He also wanted to speak to the father and daughter he helped.
"I'm just quite proud, a bit overwhelmed," he said.
Abdul Aziz: The hero who chased the terrorist
Abdul Aziz Wahabzadah has been known as one of the terror attack heroes from early on.
His story began at Friday prayers just across town from Al Noor at the Linwood Mosque.
By 1.50pm the gunman - dressed in full camouflage gear and armed with a cache of semi-automatic shotguns and assault rifles - had fled from the first mosque and arrived at the smaller Friday prayer meeting on Linwood Ave.
Wahabzadah, known as Aziz, heard gunshots outside.
Seconds later a worshipper in the front row said they'd seen someone get shot in the driveway.
Everyone panicked and some tried to run.
Aziz went to the door to investigate and saw the gunman in his camouflage clothing running back to his car, which had been parked across the driveway to prevent any vehicle entering or exiting the property.
The gunman discarded a rifle in the driveway and retrieved a loaded semi-automatic rifle from his vehicle.
Aziz ran into the fray without hesitation, grabbing an Eftpos machine to defend himself.
He screamed at the gunman and threw the machine at him.
Scott Carmody and Jim Manning: The hero constables
When the massacre started Senior Constables Scott Carmody and Jim Manning were at the Princess Margaret Hospital participating in a firearms training exercise.
In a disused ward of the Cashmere hospital the pair were upskilling around room clearance and dealing with offenders in armed incidents.
Both men had come into town that day from their rural posts.
Just after 1.40pm the news spread through the police - active shooter, multiple victims.
Carmody and Manning sprang into action.
They jumped into a patrol car and headed into the city, discussing on their way where the gunman may have gone after he fled Linwood.
He had already hit Al Noor and the men suspected he may try and flee south to the next closest mosque in Ashburton.
They suspected that to get out of town he would most likely use Brougham St - a main arterial route that runs directly onto the southbound motorway and state highway.
Their guess - based on decades of policing experience - was right and moments later they spotted the gunman's car.
The pair followed the car and made the call to run it off the road as soon as possible.
A chase might result in danger to other drivers and they needed to stop this killer immediately.
They "identified a window of opportunity to stop the vehicle and prevent the gunman inflicting further loss of life or injury".
They rammed the car, shunting it off the road and jamming the patrol car hard into the driver's side to stop the gunman getting out.
Carmody and Manning jumped out of the car and approached the offender.
Manning took up a position at the front right corner of the patrol vehicle with his service weapon pointed at the gunman.
Carmody positioned himself on the passenger side of the vehicle covering the gunman.
They could see a number of firearms in the front seat and within reach of the offender, who was wearing a bullet-proof vest with a large knife attached.
Manning also spotted a number of full petrol containers arranged in a "configuration that appeared to be intended as an improvised explosive device.".
"Receiving this honour is a huge privilege but any Police Officer in that situation would have done the same thing," Senior Constable Manning says.
Last night Carmody said he and Manning wanted to acknowledge the victims of the attacks - as well as their colleagues who were also working that day.
"The victims and their loved ones will always be front of mind for us," he said.
"And there were many, many people involved in the response including many of our fellow police officers. This award really is for every one of our colleagues involved in that response.
"All of them were prepared to put themselves in harm's way, and it could have been any one of them that came across that car on that day."
Manning said: "Receiving this honour is a huge privilege but any Police Officer in that situation would have done the same thing."