Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

After shooting, Tree of Life Synagogue plans a new beginning.

After shooting, Tree of Life Synagogue plans a new beginning

- CAMPBELL ROBERTSON

PITTSBURGH — For more than two years the Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue, on a hilltop corner in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh — has sat heavy with memory but empty of worshipper­s.

Since the morning in October 2018 when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s, the somber building complex has been by turns a crime scene, a place of mourning and the subject of long, emotional discussion­s about its future. Slowly, over months of deliberati­on, the Tree of Life congregati­on came to decide that the building would be its home for worship again as well as a commemorat­ive site, a center for communal events and a place for people from all over the world to learn about confrontin­g hatred.

By Tuesday morning, the leadership of the congregati­on was ready to announce the person chosen to help turn that vision into structure: Daniel Libeskind, the architect known for memorializ­ing historical trauma and a son of Holocaust survivors.

“To me, in the end, the most critical thing is not that people stand there with their jaws literally hanging on the ground as they look at it,” Rabbi Hazzan Jeffrey Myers of Tree of Life said. “But that they can be able to say, ‘Well look what the Tree of Life has accomplish­ed. In the wake of what happened to them, that they could be at this incredible moment.’ And we think Daniel Libeskind’s the one to be able to deliver that.”

There has been no shortage in recent years of places that once snugly fit into the patchwork of local communitie­s — schools, churches, synagogues, grocery stores — but suddenly became internatio­nally recognized sites of gun violence.

As the acute trauma receded in those places and life in the community mostly resumed, charged conversati­ons have followed about how or even whether to mark what had happened there. Sanctuarie­s and classrooms have been replaced, but questions linger about how to do justice to memory.

OVERLAPPIN­G CIRCLES

The vision at Tree of Life is similar, recognizin­g there are many overlappin­g circles of people who feel a stake in the site: the families of those who were killed, the members of the three congregati­ons that worshipped at the synagogue, the Pittsburgh Jewish community, the city at large, the country as a whole and people, Jewish and non-Jewish, all over the world.

Libeskind, who in 2003 won the competitio­n to design the World Trade Center site after the Sept. 11 attacks, said strong but often conflictin­g motivation­s were familiar in undertakin­gs like these.

“The same range, spectrum of emotions, ran through that project,” he said of the World Trade Center design process. “Many groups, competing groups with different emotions. You know, ‘Raze everything.’ ‘Rebuild even bigger, even taller.’ ‘Rebuild exactly the Twin Towers.’ ‘Don’t build anything for the next 30 years.’”

“That is the range that you get,” he continued. “There are different aspects that people want to remember and to delay and also to confront.”

Libeskind had been in New York when the attack at Tree of Life occurred. He has designed museums and memorials that commemorat­e the evils of the

Holocaust, but it rattled him deeply, he said, that such an eruption of violent anti-Semitism could take place in America — the country his family had come to seeking freedom as Jews.

He would soon learn that the suspect had apparently chosen Tree of Life because one of the three congregati­ons that worshipped there, Dor Hadash, had participat­ed in a program for refugees with HIAS. Under its original name as the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, the same group had given Libeskind’s family members financial assistance and helped them rent an apartment in a Bronx public housing complex when they arrived as immigrants in 1959.

“That struck in my heart,” he said.

FILLED WITH GRIEF

In Pittsburgh, the months after the attack were filled with grief, condolence and recitation­s of the mourner’s Kaddish. The wounded began to recover and some worshipper­s poured their anguish into activism. The gears of the judicial process began to turn, if slowly; Robert Gregory Bowers, the man charged with attacking the synagogue, has yet to go to trial. But in those first few weeks were also the beginnings of a delicate conversati­on about the building itself.

In December 2018, a Pittsburgh urban design firm, Rothschild Doyno Collaborat­ive, began holding a series of listening sessions with members of the three congregati­ons at the synagogue, which had been gathering for worship in the smaller chapels of other synagogues in Pittsburgh. Opinions about the future of the Tree of Life building ranged widely, from demolishin­g it, rebuilding it exactly as it had been, or creating something new.

Two of the congregati­ons, Dor Hadash and New Light, decided not to return. But, Rabbi Myers said, a consensus began to form among members of Tree of Life that they wanted to come back.

“As time went on, it became clearer through all of these conversati­ons,” he said, “that the predominan­ce was: We must return. If we don’t, we give the message that evil won, because it chased us out of our building.”

They would refurbish the 58-year-old sanctuary, keeping the tall stained glass windows that are the synagogue’s most striking feature. But they would rebuild the rest of the campus, creating classrooms, a communal space, a Hall of Memories dedicated to the attack itself and a home for exhibition­s and public programs of the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh.

CONGREGATI­ON IS EAGER

Libeskind said he planned to visit the site for the first time this month. The project will undoubtedl­y take time, but the congregati­on is eager for a permanent home, having been exiled from their building by the shooting and then kept from any physical gatherings at all by the coronaviru­s.

In an emailed statement, Andrea Wedner, who was shot in the arm that October morning and whose mother, 97-year-old Rose Mallinger, was killed, described the news about Libeskind as “an exciting next step in this long process of rebuilding.”

“I am looking forward to entering a new Tree of Life building,” Wedner wrote, “without fear or hesitation.”

Also killed were Michele Rosenthal’s brothers Cecil, 59, and David, 54, both men with developmen­tal disabiliti­es, who met worshipper­s at the door before services every week.

“They welcomed everyone who came through their doors to share their beloved building,” she said in a statement on Monday. “We are hopeful that this new chapter for the building will be an opportunit­y to remember those who were taken and welcome more people in.”

 ??  ??
 ?? (Tree of Life via The New York Times) ?? Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh shows the tall stained-glass windows in the sanctuary that are the synagogue’s most striking feature. The congregati­on has decided to refurbish its sanctuary, preserving the windows, but rebuild the rest of the Pittsburgh campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.
(Tree of Life via The New York Times) Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh shows the tall stained-glass windows in the sanctuary that are the synagogue’s most striking feature. The congregati­on has decided to refurbish its sanctuary, preserving the windows, but rebuild the rest of the Pittsburgh campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.
 ?? (The New York Times/Michelle Gustafson) ?? Flowers were placed at a memorial outside the Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh in October 2019, nearly one year after the attack. The congregati­on has decided to refurbish its sanctuary but rebuild the rest of the Pittsburgh campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.
(The New York Times/Michelle Gustafson) Flowers were placed at a memorial outside the Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh in October 2019, nearly one year after the attack. The congregati­on has decided to refurbish its sanctuary but rebuild the rest of the Pittsburgh campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.
 ?? (The New York Times/Ross Mantle) ?? The Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh has decided to refurbish its sanctuary but rebuild the rest of its campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.
(The New York Times/Ross Mantle) The Tree of Life - Or L’Simcha synagogue in Pittsburgh has decided to refurbish its sanctuary but rebuild the rest of its campus, creating a Hall of Memories dedicated to the 2018 attack when a gunman showed up at Shabbat services and killed 11 worshipper­s.

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