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April 27, 2019

Mourning the Loss of Chabad Synagogue Congregant Lori Gilbert Kaye

On April 27 at Chabad of Poway, an anti-Semitic gunman shot and killed my friend Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60. She was a jewel of our community — a true Eshet Chayil, a Woman of Valor. She always was rushing to do a mitzvah (good deed) and giving tzedakah (charity) for everyone. Her final good deed, witnesses said, was taking the bullets meant for Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, who was wounded but survived.

Gilbert-Kaye leaves behind a devastated husband and a 22-year-old daughter, Hannah.

When Gilbert-Kaye was shot, she wasn’t next to her husband, Howard Kaye, who is a doctor. Witnesses said after she was shot, people screamed for help, and her husband approached to perform CPR on the fallen victim. When he saw it was his wife, he fainted.

When I heard the horrific news, I called Gilbert-Kaye’s best friend of 25 years, Dr. Roneet Lev, who was at the hospital with the other victims and their families. They asked that their story be shared.

At Chabad of Poway, a San Diego suburb, on April 27, Shabbat and the last day of the Passover holiday, authorities said a 19-year-old stormed in and said, “F— the Jews” and opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle. The suspect reportedly had posted an online manifesto that featured anti-Semitic screeds and talked about planning the attack. He is suspected of shooting and killing Gilbert-Kaye, who was standing between the gunman and Goldstein. Goldstein was shot in the hand, and afterward told his congregation to stay strong. As he was being wheeled into surgery, he said, “Let everyone know Lori Kaye saved me.”

The heroes and God’s hand prevented the killer from claiming more lives.

Other victims sustaining injuries include an 8-year-old girl, Noya Dahan, who was hit by shrapnel. She asked for her photo to be shared and for everyone to know she’s strong.

The other victim, who sustained shrapnel wounds in the leg, was Almog Peretz, 34, Noya’s uncle who lives in Sderot, Israel, and was visiting his family for the Passover holiday. He is being credited with ushering children to safety after the shooting began.

Miraculously, the shooter’s gun had jammed. A man named Oscar Stewart, a 51-year-old Army veteran, reportedly confronted the gunman and chased him into the parking lot. Other members of the synagogue, who carried licensed concealed weapons, also went after him. An off-duty Border Patrol agent who was working as a private security guard for the synagogue, Jonathan Morales, fired at the gunman’s car.

The heroes and God’s hand prevented the killer from claiming more lives. Fortunately, the suspect was caught and is in custody. Thank you to our law enforcement for your support.

Here’s the insane irony: Noya Dahan’s family moved to San Diego from the Sderot (San Diego’s sister city) to get away from the terrorism and the constant attacks on their community. The peaceful city in Israel they’re from is in the Negev and is less than a mile from the Gaza border. For years, their home has been a major target of Qassam rocket attacks from terrorists in the Gaza Strip. After they moved to San Diego, swastikas were painted on the family’s vehicle and garage.

Anti-Semitism is real and is deadly. Hate crimes are real and are deadly. Lori Gilbert-Kaye would have wanted all of us to stand up to hate. She was a warrior of love and she will be missed. May her memory be a blessing. To honor her, please perform an act of kindness today with her in mind.

Please pray for the recovery of Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, Almog Peretz and Noya Dahan.


This post was originally published on Facebook April 27 and is featured here with her permission. It has since been updated with new information from the author. 

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Alleged San Diego Synagogue Shooter Was Inspired By Pittsburgh, New Zealand Shootings

A report from NBC News alleges the man suspected of the April 27 shooting at a San Diego synagogue was inspired by the Tree of Life shooting in Pittsburgh in October and the New Zealand shootings in March.

According to the report, the 19-year-old suspected shooter allegedly said in an online manifesto posted before the April 27 shooting that he was the one responsible for the arson attack at a mosque in Escondido in San Diego on March 24.

The shooter killed 60-year-old Lori Gilbert-Kaye, who was a pillar of the community at the Chabad of Poway and injured three others, including the Chabad Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein and a child. All three are listed in stable condition.

The alleged shooter reportedly wore a helmet and a bulletproof vest and fired around 12 to 14 shots inside the synagogue. An off-duty Border Patrol agent chased after the shooter when he tried to escape the scene. The officer hit the alleged shooter’s vehicle. The alleged shooter subsequently called 911. When a police officer found him driving the suspect pulled over and surrendered.

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Jewish Community Grief-Stricken by Poway Synagogue Shooting

The April 27 shooting at Chabad of Poway in San Diego County has left the Jewish community saddened and outraged.

Sixty-year-old Lori Gilbert-Kaye was killed in the attack. Chabad Senior Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, 57, lost his right index finger in the shooting, and 8-year-old Noya Dahan and her 34-year-old uncle, Almog Peretz, sustained shrapnel wounds. All were treated at a nearby hospital and later discharged.

Authorities arrested the alleged shooter — a 19-year-old white male — and are treating the shooting as a hate crime.

Jewish National Fund President Dr. Sol Lizerbram said in a statement that Gilbert-Kaye was “a pillar of our community and the Jewish people,” and lauded the fact she and her husband, Dr. Howard Kaye, frequently bought trees to be planted in Israel.

“My wife, Lauren, and I are taking the first step to ensure that Lori’s name and spirit live on in perpetuity as we plant a forest in Israel in her loving memory, and we ask our friends across the nation to join us,” Lizerbram said.

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said in a statement, “It’s truly heartbreaking to see yet another tragedy on Shabbat but also on a day when we celebrate the end of the Passover festival. Jewish people and those of all faiths should not have to live in fear of going to their house of worship. From Charleston to Pittsburgh to Oak Creek, and from Christchurch to Sri Lanka, and now Poway, we need to say ‘enough is enough.’ ”

“After Pittsburgh, I was sad. Everyday anti-Semitism became violent. We had vigils. We mourned. We cried. And now, after Poway, I’m pissed. After eight days of prayer and ‘crying out from the depths,’ I find another white supremacist, another gunman, another AR15, another dead Jew.” — Rabbi Noah Farkas

The Simon Wiesenthal Center said in a statement, “This tragic attack, on the last day of Passover, is a horrific reminder that the flames of hatred still burn strong among some. An attack, on any house of worship, from churches in Sri Lanka and France to synagogues in Jerusalem or Pittsburgh to mosques in Christchurch, are an assault on human dignity and our rights as people of faith to pray to G-d.”

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Porter Ranch) tweeted, “Our hearts and prayers are with the victims in Poway, California. Pleased to hear that synagogues in Los Angeles are receiving additional protection now.”

The Israeli-American Council (IAC) said in a statement that the shooting is “the product of age-old hate that continues to infect millions around the world. In recent years, anti-Semitic tropes once confined to the fringes of our culture have been increasingly expressed openly and unabashedly, including in mainstream American media.”

The Lawfare Project said in a statement, “We cry out today. We cry out for the dead. We cry out for the injured. We cry out for the Chabad community of San Diego and for our global Jewish community. We cry out for a world where these acts of violence against innocent worshipers have become all too common.”

Rabbi Zach Shapiro of Temple Akiba in Culver City wrote, “In these times when hate crimes attempt to paralyze our community, we reach inward for strength, to one another for support, and to God for healing. And we remember: Hate toward any one group is hate toward all groups.”

American Jewish Committee CEO David Harris said in a statement, “When will this open-hunting season on Jews end? Once again, American Jews are compelled to ask what more can be done to protect houses of worship, indeed all Jewish institutions, even as we extend our deep condolences to the family and friends of Lori Gilbert-Kaye, and full recovery of those wounded, including a child, in this heinous attack during a Shabbat service on the last day of Passover.”

Temple Emanuel clergy said in a statement posted on Rabbi Sarah Bassin’s Facebook page, “Here we just experienced a taste of freedom and redemption on Passover — where we remembered a moment in our history where we broke off the shackles of supremacist ideology. But gunshots shook us from our longing for redemption … and stole away life from our people … again.”

Valley Beth Shalom’s Rabbi Noah Farkas posted to his Facebook page, “After Charlottesville, I was shocked. Tiki torch Nazis marching through the streets shouting ‘Jews will not replace us.’ Something was stirring and no one seems to know how to slow it down. After Pittsburgh, I was sad. Everyday anti-Semitism became violent. We had vigils. We mourned. We cried. And now after Poway, I’m pissed. After eight days of prayer and ‘crying out from the depths,’ I find another white supremacist, another gunman, another AR15, another dead Jew.”

IKAR’s Rabbi Sharon Brous, Rabbi Ronit Tsadok, Rabbi David Kasher, Rabbi Keilah Lebell and CEO Melissa Balaban said in a statement, “These synagogue attacks also come amidst a series of attacks on churches, mosques and temples in this country and around the world. No person should fear violence when entering a house of worship to open their hearts to the Holy One. We pray for an end to this violence and the hatred that fuels it.”

Sinai Temple Rabbi David Wolpe wrote on his Facebook page: “When a Nazi-like cartoon appears in the newspaper of record, when the alt-right has been emboldened and empowered, when anti-Semitic statements come from Congress, when synagogues are continually upping security — we as a society have to be self-critical, vigilant and aware … . We need, as a society, to have greater security in all houses of worship, greater vigilance in monitoring who has access to weapons, greater awareness of mental health issues and less tolerance for any expressions of hatred, with anti-Semitism, quite frankly, heading the list. Screaming about how bad the other guy is will not — I repeat will not — make headway or solve problems. Let’s not make a craven attack at a synagogue the cause for more division among people who want a society of goodness and peace.” 

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One Dead, Multiple Injured in San Diego Synagogue Shooting

(JTA) — A shooting at a Chabad synagogue in Poway, a city in San Diego County, California, left one person dead and multiple people injured, including a child.

Police there detained a white 19-year old San Diego man in connection with the shooting, and hospitals said they were taking in wounded people. The man left an “open letter” prior to the shooting, law enforcement said.

“A man has been detained for questioning in connection with a shooting incident at the Chabad of Poway synagogue,” the San Diego County Sheriff’s office said Saturday afternoon on Twitter. “@SDSOPoway Deputies were called to Chabad Way just before 11:30 a.m. There are injuries. This is a developing situation.”

Sheriff William Dore said in a press conference that the fatality was an adult woman. The three injured were two adults and one juvenile, he said.

A police spokesman said that a Customs and Border Patrol agent fired on the suspect as he fled from the synagogue, hitting his vehicle. The suspect, who is 19, called police and turned himself in, exiting his car with his hands up when police arrived where he had pulled over. There was an assault rifle in the car.

CNN quoted the Palomar Medical Center Poway as saying it was expecting four trauma patients from the shooting.

Steve Vaus, the town’s mayor, told CNN that there was one fatality, and that the danger was over. He said that congregants had engaged and helped to stop the shooter. He said the shooter apparently had anti-Semitic intent.

“I have heard that this was someone with hate in their heart, hate toward the Jewish community,” he said.

Later, Vaus added: “It was a hate crime,” an assessment he said was based on “statements that were made when the shooter entered.” He would not elaborate.

The shooting comes on the last day of Passover and six months to the day after the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history, when an alleged white supremacist murdered 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue complex.

CNN quoted witnesses as saying that there were six or seven shots, and that the rabbi had two fingers blown off.

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