Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle 2-14-20

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February 14, 2020 | 19 Shevat 5780

Candlelighting 5:36 p.m. | Havdalah 6:36 p.m. | Vol. 63, No. 7 | pittsburghjewishchronicle.org

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Tree of Life works to collect Jewish the story of items left after attack community focuses on disability awareness in February

NOTEWORTHY LOCAL Maspeak founders honored

By Adam Reinherz | Staff Writer

Local organizers fighting white nationalism win award.

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LOCAL New Holocaust Museum findings

 Items left after the attack at the Tree of Life building. By David Rullo | Staff Writer

Penn Hills native shared new information about Nazi camps. Page 3

LOCAL Interfaith funerals Some rabbis are now sharing funeral duties with clergy from other religions. Page 4

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n the days and weeks following the Oct. 27 attack at the Tree of Life building, mourners created a makeshift memorial outside the scene of the massacre. Stuffed animals, notes, a marathon medal, tennis shoes and painted stones were some of the items left among the thousands of flowers that lined the sidewalk on Wilkins and Shady avenues. These objects — some with an explicit connection to the shooting; others without — were a visible way for the community to express their grief. Laurie Zittrain Eisenberg, a board member at Tree of Life*Or L’Simcha and faculty member of the history department at Carnegie Mellon University, was one of the volunteers who helped dismantle the memorial. “Since most of these items were left anonymously, we were left to our own devices to read into some of the more ambiguous ones what the person’s intent had been, what the item meant to them, why they wanted us to have it.” Tree of Life is now working to discover

Photo by Laurie Zittrain Eisenberg

the backstory behind some of the more esoteric pieces, since the stories behind the more obviously connected items are “very touching, moving and powerful.” In addition to looking for people who left inanimate objects, Tree of Life members also hope to identity a violinist and church choir that performed in front of the building in the first weeks after the attack. The synagogue has been able to locate some people who left gifts through contemporaneous media stories or happenstance. It is now widening the search, creating a page on its website where people can submit the story of what they left at the memorial. Historian Eisenberg said she has a “sensitivity to preserve this tangible evidence of the community’s response to the assault on the synagogue,” a generous, spontaneous reaction “that should be preserved as part of the larger story.” While no permanent home has been chosen yet to house the collection and stories, it will ultimately be a location

Please see Tree of Life, page 14

hroughout February, local residents and organizations are calling attention to disability inclusion as part of Jewish Disability Awareness & Inclusion Month. Last week, Nancy Gale, executive director of Jewish Residential Services, traveled to Washington, D.C., on Feb. 4 for Jewish Disability Advocacy Day. Gale and fellow participants heard from authorities on disability inclusion and met with politicians to discuss continued efforts. “It was just a really terrific day,” said Gale. “I learned a lot, and we had a chance to see how this works — where bills are proposed and constituents go and voice their opinions about them.” The day represented a number of milestones. Aside from marking the 10th annual Jewish Disability Advocacy Day on Capitol Hill, participants commemorated the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act and the 45th anniversary of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Jewish Disability Advocacy Day, which is supported by the Jewish Federations of North America, the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism and the Jewish Disability Network, draws delegations from all over the country, including from the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh. “Jewish Federation’s Community Campaign supports advocacy on issues important to the Jewish community on both the state and national level, and a critical part of those efforts is advocating for legislation and funding for people with disabilities,” said Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh Marketing Director Adam Hertzman, Please see Disability, page 14

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