Houston Chronicle

Ceremony honors 11 synagogue shooting victims

- By Ramesh Santanam

PITTSBURGH — Sunday’s public lighting of a Menorah outside a Pittsburgh synagogue where 11 people were killed in a mass shooting was an opportunit­y to honor the dead, mark Hanukkah’s theme of survival and allow the community to reinforce its solidarity.

“To me, it’s a simple message: The light is the message,” Rabbi Jeffrey Myers said, pointing to the Menorah standing at the corner where a makeshift memorial for the 11 victims once stood and was visited by thousands paying their respects.

Five weeks after the massacre — believed to be the deadliest attack on Jews in the U.S. — about 500 people gathered outside Tree of Life to pray, sing songs and witness the lighting of the Menorah.

“We are practicing our Jewish faith publicly and proudly,” said Stephen Cohen, co-president of New Light, whose congregati­on, along with congregant­s from Dor Hadash and Tree of Life, had gathered at the synagogue when the shooting occurred Oct. 27.

The fact that hundreds of people showed up for the ceremony came as no surprise to officials of the three congregati­ons.

“I don’t think there are enough adjectives to describe the community support,” said Myers, who was leading Shabbat services at Tree of Life synagogue Oct. 27, when the shooting occurred.

“We’re such a tight-knit community,” said Ilana Kohanbash, who attended the Menorah lighting with her husband, Jason. “It’s also a wake-up call for what we need to do to keep our faith, and (that) we need to take precaution­s. It could happen to anybody.”

The suspected shooter, Robert Bowers, raged against Jews during and after the shooting, authoritie­s said. He remains jailed without bail and has pleaded not guilty to numerous charges.

David Hausdorff, 53, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, was in town on business and came to the ceremony in support.

“It’s unfathomab­le, this act of violence,” Hausdorff said. “It’s unconscion­able in any house of worship, let alone in a neighborho­od I grew up in. If I weren’t here to actually see it, I wouldn’t grasp the totality of the emotional devastatio­n.”

“We all begin the process of moving forward,” said Ellen Surloff, president of Dor Hadash. “You move forward one day at a time. You have good days and some not-so-good days.”

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