Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle 10-1-21

Page 1

October 1, 2021 | 25 Tishrei 5782

Candlelighting 6:44 p.m. | Havdalah 7:40 p.m. | Vol. 64, No. 40 | pittsburghjewishchronicle.org

NOTEWORTHY LOCAL Book Review: ‘The Soul of a Neighborhood’ Squirrel Hill after the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting

Suspect for Squirrel Hill assaults Mark arrested, ethnic intimidation Oppenheimer charges filed on ‘Squirrel Hill’ David Rullo | Staff Writer

M

Page 2

LOCAL ‘Our little mitzvah’

50 gallons of breast milk, and counting Page 3

LOCAL On your mark …

 Sign in Squirrel Hill

Photo by Jamie Lebovitz

By David Rullo | Staff Writer

The report specifies that no physical or verbal threats were directed toward the second victim, though it makes no mention of a physical or verbal threat toward the first victim. Shaare Torah Rabbi Daniel Wasserman told the Chronicle he had heard reports of an unknown person verbally assaulting congregants. The situation “came to a head,” Wasserman said, when a man came into the synagogue for services on Sept. 20 saying he had been assaulted, both physically and verbally. “He was shaking like a leaf and said somebody had thrown him into a car,” Wasserman told the Chronicle. “At first, I thought he meant kidnapped, pulled into the car; he meant against the car.” The synagogue’s security cameras had

P Youth sports back in full swing Page 4

$1.50

ittsburgh Police arrested Tyrone Correll on Wednesday, Sept. 22, for two incidents of assault in Squirrel Hill targeting Jews. Correll, 30, was charged with simple assault, harassment and ethnic intimidation, as well as other charges stemming from his arrest, including terroristic threats, disorderly conduct, aggravated assault and resisting arrest. According to a police report, Correll shouted antisemitic comments at a male near the intersection of Murray Avenue and Nicholson Street on the early morning of Sept. 20. About the same time, the report states that Correll yelled profanities at a second male on Nicholson Street, but did not physically or verbally threaten him.

ark Oppenheimer’s new book, “Squirrel Hill: The Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and the Soul of a Neighborhood,” which will be released Oct. 5, 2021, recounts the massacre through interviews with those impacted — both directly and tangentially — while examining the effects of the event on the Squirrel Hill neighborhood. The author’s Pittsburgh roots go back several generations. His great-great-great grandfather co-founded the first Jewish burial society in Pittsburgh, and his father grew up on Aylesboro Avenue. In writing his book, Oppenheimer traveled to the city 32 times, interviewed about 250 people and had contact with relatives of eight of the 11 people who were murdered that day. He also relied heavily on various news reports, including many published in the Chronicle. Oppenheimer had a virtual conversation with the Chronicle to discuss the book prior to its release. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Why did you decide to write this book now?

I was always curious about Squirrel Hill. The morning of the shooting, I was at a bat mitzvah in Newton, Massachusetts, with my eldest daughter. We had left our phones in the car until after the lunch. We got back to our car, I opened my phone, and I had a ton of messages. “Is everyone safe in Pittsburgh? Are you going to Pittsburgh? Did you know anyone in Pittsburgh?” Then I looked at my news app and saw that there had been a shooting at a synagogue in Squirrel Hill. It immediately registered as the neighborhood where my father and grandfather and great-grandfather had all lived. My father was a fifth-generation Pittsburgher and his family settled in Squirrel Hill pretty much around the time that Jews were settling

Please see Assault, page 14

Please see Oppenheimer, page 14

keep your eye on PittsburghJewishChronicle LOCAL

Pittsburgh’s Skinny Building

LOCAL

impACT at Hillel JUC

FOOD

It’s soup weather


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle 10-1-21 by Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle - Issuu