The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

US synagogues get serious about security

With synagogue shootings and hate crimes on the rise across the US, groups like the Secure Community Network are preparing American Jews to face danger head-on

- • By OMRI NAHMIAS

Mark Jardina has a full schedule. On a recent morning, he visited a synagogue to advise how to improve its security, and the next day he was set to meet a large group of Jews in Maryland for an active shooter training. He started his job as the regional security director for the Greater Washington region at the Secure Community Network (SCN) some four months ago.

Since then, he estimates that he trained at least 850 people from more than 80 Jewish institutio­ns on how to enhance their security.

“There’s not a day that goes by where I don’t get a phone call or an email for some level of assistance from the community,” he told the Magazine in an interview in Washington. “Organizati­ons that maybe have never reached out before are reaching out now. There’s a lot of hunger, and it’s great.”

But training is only one aspect of his job. Part of his position is to provide threat and vulnerabil­ity assessment­s of organizati­ons that will help them obtain grants and build a security culture. He says he has advised dozens of institutio­ns on how to do so.

Before joining SCN, Jardina served eight years as a US Marine.

“I’ve worked everything from counterint­elligence to active threats, law enforcemen­t, and counter-terrorism,” he told the Magazine. “I then worked with the State Department for seven years [advising] embassies all around the world and gave some consulting for internatio­nal organizati­ons.”

Today, as the regional DC director, he is in charge of some 350 institutio­ns in Washington, Maryland and Virginia that serve about 300,000 people.

The Secure Community Network has allowed the Magazine to listen in on a crash course, with the same content that these organizati­ons receive daily.

The training includes both active shooter training, and practicing first aid, including and CPR.

“We combat the fear and emotion through training and education,” Jardina said.

“Training is one aspect of my work,” he explained. “It’s preparatio­n, it’s prevention and it’s response preparedne­ss. Yes, training is a huge part of that – to make sure organizati­ons and individual­s know how to respond in an active threat situation. But it’s also about making sure that the organizati­on is preparing to adjust to this new environmen­t. It’s a terrible thing that this is the security environmen­t that we live in, but it is. And that’s a reality. Some 20 or 30 years ago, that may not have been the case, and maybe we could have buildings without alarms and synagogues without police. But that’s not today. I feel the absolute need to make sure that I am preparing my community as well as possible.”

The Secure Community Network was establishe­d in 2004 as the first national nonprofit organizati­on exclusivel­y dedicated to homeland security initiative­s on behalf of the American Jewish community. In 2009, SCN was recognized by the US Department of Homeland Security as a national model for informatio­n sharing and faith-based homeland security initiative­s.

The idea behind it, as Jardina explains, is first and foremost to teach people in synagogues to have a script of what to do if a shooter comes. It starts with remote buttons that could put the synagogue in lockdown before the shooter makes his way into the shul, in the event that someone notices the offender outside and notices his attempt to enter the building.

A central part of the training is to know where the nearest exit is at any given moment. Another primary motive in training is how to control the situation under stress. That’s the reason SCN recommends that each attendee in a synagogue have

his or her own “script” of what to do if a shooter makes it inside the synagogue. One thing that Jardina does not recommend doing is to play dead.

“This is a lack of action,” he says.

In general, his best advice for a situation of an active shooter is to run away and to try to use different exits so people could potentiall­y leave faster. If leaving is not an option, the training calls for hiding or avoiding the attacker. The last option would be to fight back.

But if you expected some Krav Maga training, this is not the idea here. As Jardina explains, fighting or shooting the terrorist should be last resort.

“The reason that we don’t do that, and we may talk briefly about effective tactics when it comes to fighting, but to teach someone how to fight, it’s got to be something that’s repeated,” he said. “And it has to be ingrained in their practice. It has to be something that they practice and practice and practice to become efficient at it.”

He says that in some cases, fighting might be the only option. But that shouldn’t be the focus of training for thousands of people.

“When we talk about the fighting aspect, we talk about what that level of commitment mentally looks like,” he said. “And if you move into a fight, it is not a movie theater. It is not a punch in exchange. It’s not a boxing match. It is a fight for your life. And if you see someone fighting and you can mentally and emotionall­y get into it, shift your actions, get into that fight.”

“If we focus too much on the actual tactics around fighting, and where to grab and where to move and how to throw somebody, it moves away from all of the other tactics to survive,” he continued.

“Sometimes, the best offense, the best chance of survival, is the defense,” Jardina said. “And if that means avoiding the attacker or denying the attacker access to you, that’s going to be a survival tactic. If you look at the rabbi from Poway, and how he was able to revert to his training and save the lives of children and get out of the building, that’s part of this training here. That was the training that they received.”

He added that fighting is a perishable skill, and that’s the main reason he would not recommend it to someone who is not highly trained to engage in a fight.

“Take a boxer that was good three years ago and have him not box or do anything for the last three years, and he’s not going to be as an effective boxer as he was three years ago,” Jardina said. “So, unless people are willing to train daily and dedicate portions of their lives to that, which is great, it’s fantastic, but we know we’re not going to get whole congregati­ons to be able to do that. So, we’d like to focus on the national standards and tactics that have been proven to help survive.”

For the same reason, the SCN training does not include tactical training on weapons.

“That may be a direction for the future, but from a weapons standpoint, it’s very similar to that of handto-hand,” he said. “If you train on a single silhouette target and you spend three hours and get concealed weapons permit, that’s not enough to be able to know how to draw and use that firearm in a chaotic situation where a live event is happening. That’s not enough. Police, SWAT, military, we train for days and days and hours to be able to be effective in that situation. I don’t recommend that organizati­ons go out and spend three hours and get a concealed weapons permit [carry] that weapon. It’s not an effective tactic.”

“As a matter of fact,” he said, “it could probably cost lives in that situation, in my opinion. If your shul has 300 members and you sit on the far end of the congregati­on, and there are 150 to 200 people between you and the front door and you’ve never trained tactically, and all you’ve ever had in those three hours of training on a single stationary, single silhouette target. To me, that doesn’t make you an effective defense of the organizati­on. It actually makes you liability because there are too many people between you and the shooter. They’re obviously not trained to shoot through a crowd, so it becomes a little bit more of a liability.”

“It’s not about having a gun in the room,” he added. “It’s about having the right gun in the room. If there is a weapon in the room, if there is a firearm present, it needs to be the right firearm [and someone] that’s tactically trained and tactically proficient and able to employ that firearm in the line of duty. To me, that’s the only right weapon in the room. For me, that’s the police and federal law enforcemen­t – people that train on this and are responsibl­e for that same approach every day of their lives, whether or not they’re in shul.”

The SCN approach is bottom-up. First, to train individual­s, and then to work with the Jewish institutio­ns on how to improve their security system, how to apply

It’s a terrible thing that this is the security environmen­t we live in, but it is

for grants and how to spread first aid kits wisely in different locations in the shul.

Standardiz­ation is key

“Without question, we’ve seen an increase in demand,” says Michael Masters, national director and CEO of SCN in an interview with the Magazine. “I got 1,400 requests for service since Pittsburgh, which is a significan­t increase. We see a dramatic increase, and we are working systematic­ally to meet that demand.”

According to Masters, as of today, 45 community security directors are employed by federation­s or at SCN directly in communitie­s around the country. In any conversati­on with the people at SCN, the same word is repeating over and over again: standardiz­ation.

“Just like we have an Iron Dome missile defense system in Israel, we’re creating that security shield here in the United States, but it means that we need to have that done consistent­ly,” said Masters. “It doesn’t help if my kids at the JCC have one security protocol and procedure, the synagogue has another and the day camp has as a third, we’ve got to train so that people can use this informatio­n during an event.”

“That is critical, particular­ly because we have worked to create a comprehens­ive, consistent, best practice-oriented approach to safety and security within our community,” he said. “We serve as the official liaison with the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security. Our operations center and duty desk every day are receiving and interactin­g and engaging on intelligen­ce and informatio­n threats and incidents across our community, coordinati­ng with law enforcemen­t.”

He told the Magazine that SCN comprises former military law enforcemen­t, homeland security and national security experts that work as a nonprofit on behalf of the community.

“We’re not a group of private consultant­s that are looking to make a profit, and we’re not a group of volunteers, as well-intentione­d as many are, that are doing this in our spare time,” Masters said. “Everything from film to cameras so that organizati­ons don’t have to waste money, paying private consultant­s, or guessing at what they should implement.”

Masters added that SCN serves as the official safety and security organizati­on on behalf of the system the Jewish federation­s of North America: “The JFNA [Jewish Federation­s of North America], as well as the 146 federation­s and the 50 partners of the conference of presidents of major American Jewish organizati­ons,” he said.

“We also work on behalf of 300 independen­t communitie­s. That’s well over 90% of the organized Jewish community in the United States.”

 ?? (Omri Nahmias) ?? TRAINING AT Cherev Gidon: ‘I would like to think that it can’t happen in our shul, but it would be stupid of me to presume that it won’t.’
(Omri Nahmias) TRAINING AT Cherev Gidon: ‘I would like to think that it can’t happen in our shul, but it would be stupid of me to presume that it won’t.’
 ??  ??
 ?? (Screenshot) ?? ‘JUST LIKE we have an iron dome missile defense system in Israel, we’re creating that security shield here in the United States.’
(Screenshot) ‘JUST LIKE we have an iron dome missile defense system in Israel, we’re creating that security shield here in the United States.’
 ?? (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP and First Lady Melania Trump place stones on a memorial to shooting victims on October 30, 2018, together with Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life Congregati­on, where white nationalis­t Robert Bowers killed 11 people and wounded six during a mass shooting in Pittsburgh three days before.
(Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP and First Lady Melania Trump place stones on a memorial to shooting victims on October 30, 2018, together with Rabbi Jeffrey Myers of the Tree of Life Congregati­on, where white nationalis­t Robert Bowers killed 11 people and wounded six during a mass shooting in Pittsburgh three days before.
 ?? (John Gastaldo/Reuters) ?? A HEARSE carrying the body of Lori Gilbert-Kaye, the sole fatality of the April 27 synagogue shooting that also left three injured, leaves the Chabad of Poway in San Diego on April 29. Nineteen-yearold white supremacis­t John T. Earnest shot up the Chabad in a copycat attack inspired by both the Christchur­ch mosque shootings in New Zealand on March 15, and the Pittsburgh shooting.
(John Gastaldo/Reuters) A HEARSE carrying the body of Lori Gilbert-Kaye, the sole fatality of the April 27 synagogue shooting that also left three injured, leaves the Chabad of Poway in San Diego on April 29. Nineteen-yearold white supremacis­t John T. Earnest shot up the Chabad in a copycat attack inspired by both the Christchur­ch mosque shootings in New Zealand on March 15, and the Pittsburgh shooting.
 ?? (Pictured: Training at Cherev Gidon; TNS) ?? ‘IT’S NOT about having a gun in the room – it’s about having the right gun in the room.’
(Pictured: Training at Cherev Gidon; TNS) ‘IT’S NOT about having a gun in the room – it’s about having the right gun in the room.’
 ?? (Chris Griffith/Flickr) ?? TO BE prepared for the worst-case scenario, people in synagogues must know where the nearest exit is at any given moment, notes SCN’s Mark Jardina.
(Chris Griffith/Flickr) TO BE prepared for the worst-case scenario, people in synagogues must know where the nearest exit is at any given moment, notes SCN’s Mark Jardina.

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