San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

PA. JEWISH CONGREGATI­ONS FOCUS ON THEIR RESILIENCE

Day of service is among ways to mark shooting anniversar­y

- BY DAVID CRARY Crary writes for The Associated Press.

Two years ago, the three congregati­ons sharing space at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue relocated after an anti-semitic gunman killed 11 worshipper­s. Last March, the congregati­ons dispersed from their new locations due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and switched to virtual services.

On Tuesday, as they again mourn those killed on Oct. 27, 2018, they’ll also celebrate the resilience that has enabled them to persevere.

Maggie Feinstein of the 10.27 Healing Partnershi­p, which has been supporting those affected by the attack, was impressed by how the congregati­ons have coped with the pandemic.

“They started phone chains, thought about ways to reach their vulnerable population,” she said. “I found it incredibly inspiring that these three congregati­ons, when crisis hit, knew how to pull together as a community and not leave anybody behind.”

The centerpiec­e of the commemorat­ions is an online ceremony Tuesday evening that includes a performanc­e by world-renowned cellist Yo-yo-ma of a piece by Jewish composer Ernest Bloch.

And a day of community service is being organized for today by the Pittsburgh branch of Repair the World, a Jewish nonprofit. Activities include a blood drive, food distributi­on and cleanups of Jewish cemeteries.

Coinciding with the commemorat­ion will be publicatio­n of an anthology of essays by Pittsburgh-area writers, reflecting on how the attack impacted them and their community. Co-editor Beth Kissileff is the wife of Rabbi Jonathan Perlman, who took shelter in a supply closet with three members of his New

Light congregati­on during the attack.

Most of the commemorat­ions were planned by a group that included the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh, the Jewish Community Center and members of the three congregati­ons. One of the group’s co-chairs lost her brother in the shooting; the other lost her mother.

Of the three congregati­ons based in the synagogue in 2018, only Tree of Life, the host, plans to return when the building reopens after renovation. There’s no timeline yet for that project; the congregati­on has hired consultant­s to help with logistics and wants to accommodat­e other organizati­ons and activities.

Nearby Chatham University and the Holocaust Center of Pittsburgh are expected to share some of the reconfigur­ed space. There also will be a memorial to those killed in the attack.

Before the pandemic, Tree of Life was holding services at Rodef Shalom, a historic temple completed in 1907. But since March, in-person worship and group activities have been halted in favor of virtual gatherings.

Rabbi Jeffrey Myers said his appearance­s on Zoom and Facebook, livestream­ed from his living room, have gained a loyal following, including a woman in Australia who joins Tuesday classes in which he discusses prayers offered the preceding Friday.

“During the pandemic, people are seeking community,” he said. “We try in any way to help them find solace and hope and inspiratio­n.”

A second congregati­on, Dor Hadash, also had been worshippin­g at Rodef Shalom and plans to return there once the pandemic eases enough to allow in-person services, according to its president, Donna Coufal.

She said Dor Hadash has remained politicall­y active, engaging in issues such as racial justice and gun violence.

The third, New Light, had been at the Beth Shalom synagogue in the same Squirrel Hill neighborho­od where the attack occurred. Congregati­on co-president Stephen Cohen said the arrangemen­t has worked well and New Light plans to remain there long-term.

Of the three, only New Light has resumed in-person services, but Cohen said most members, many of whom are over 70, remain wary and participat­e via Zoom. The 15 or so who attend in person wear masks and sit at least 6 feet apart.

“Before March we were beginning to recreate our community, and then on March 23 it all falls apart,” Cohen said, referring to the imposition of a stay-at-home order. “We have adapted as best we can.“

The idea for the anthology arose from conversati­ons among New Light members, encouraged by Kissileff, an author and essayist. She recruited as co-editor Eric Lidji, a Pittsburgh-based historian who has overseen efforts to preserve documentat­ion of the 2018 attack.

They in turn brought in 22 other writers, journalist­s, academics and rabbis to contribute to the anthology, “Bound in the Bond of Life.”

The entries include poetry, oral history and an essay by Carnegie Mellon University historian Laura Zittrain Eisenberg about the memorials that sprung up outside the synagogue after the attack and items left there — flowers, candles, a guitar, a pair of sneakers.

Kissileff and Lidji included three non-jews among the contributo­rs: Peter Smith, religion writer for the Pittsburgh Post-gazette; Tony Norman, a Postgazett­e columnist; and Campbell Robertson, a Pittsburgh-based New York Times correspond­ent.

“I wanted to acknowledg­e this didn’t just affect the Jewish community,” Kissileff said.

 ?? STEPH CHAMBERS AP FILE ?? Rabbi Eli Wilansky lights a candle at a memorial after a mass shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborho­od in 2018.
STEPH CHAMBERS AP FILE Rabbi Eli Wilansky lights a candle at a memorial after a mass shooting at Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborho­od in 2018.

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