Journal Pioneer

Shooting victims’ funerals begin

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Pittsburgh’s Jewish community began burying its dead Tuesday, holding the first in a weeklong series of funerals for the 11 people gunned down in a synagogue in the bloodiest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history.

Cecil and David Rosenthal, intellectu­ally disabled brothers in their 50s, were “beautiful souls” who had “not an ounce of hate in them - something we’re terribly missing today,” Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, a survivor of Saturday’s massacre, said at the brothers’ funeral.

Myers, his voice quivering, said it was difficult for him to find the words to comfort mourners. But he told the Rosenthals’ parents and other family members: “The entire world is sharing its grief with you, so you don’t walk alone.”

The Rosenthals’ sister, Diane Hirt, said she never imagined burying one sibling, much less two, and under such tragic circumstan­ces. Though her brothers were in middle age, they were widely known as “the boys.”

“They were innocent like boys, not hardened like men,” she said.

She said Cecil - a gregarious man with a booming voice who was lightheart­edly known as the honorary mayor of Squirrel Hall and the “town crier” for the gossip he managed to gather - would have especially enjoyed the media attention this week, a thought that brought laughter from the congregati­on.

With the Tree of Life synagogue still cordoned off as a crime scene, the funerals were being held at nearby synagogues and other Jewish sites.

The casket of Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz, a family physician known for his caring and kindness, was brought to the Jewish Community Center in the city’s Squirrel Hill neighbourh­ood for the day’s first funeral. Two police vehicles were posted at a side door and two at the main entrance.

A line stretched around the block as mourners - some in white medical coats, some wearing yarmulkes, black hats or head scarves - passed beneath the blue Romanesque arches into the brick building, an American flag nearby fluttering at half-staff.

“A lot of people are feeling really angry about this. A lot of rage built up inside about this, because of it being a hate crime. Don’t get me wrong; I do. But I’m so overwhelme­d with sadness right now that I can’t even be angry right now,” said Robin Faulkner, whose family had seen Rabinowitz for 30 years and counted him as a dear friend. “It’s just such a loss. Just tragic.”

Less than two miles away, hundreds of mourners dressed mostly in black converged on the city’s oldest and largest synagogue, Rodef Shalom, for the brothers’ funeral.

Among the mourners was Kate Lederman. She grew up in the Tree of Life synagogue and celebrated all of her milestones there. She recently gave birth.

“I was named there, bat mitzvahed there, married there. And my whole life was in that synagogue. Same with my father. And we knew Cecil and David. We knew all of them. This should be a week of pure joy having a baby, but it’s a week of terror,” she said. “We were supposed to have our baby naming there, but we’re going to do it at home.”

A funeral was also set Tuesday for Daniel Stein, a man seen as part of the core of his congregati­on.

The other victims’ funerals have been scheduled through Friday in a week of mourning, anguish and questions about the rampage that authoritie­s say was carried out by a gunman who raged against Jews.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Mourners line up around the block from the Jewish Community Center in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh Tuesday, to attend the funeral service for Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz, one of 11 people killed while worshippin­g at the Tree of Life synagogue on Saturday Oct. 27.
AP PHOTO Mourners line up around the block from the Jewish Community Center in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh Tuesday, to attend the funeral service for Dr. Jerry Rabinowitz, one of 11 people killed while worshippin­g at the Tree of Life synagogue on Saturday Oct. 27.

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