A friend forwarded this report to me.
<emFriends,
We are posting this poignant letter written by Alan Zimmerman, president of Congregation Beth Israel in Charlottesville, VA. Besides those of us in our congregation who feel a kinship with Charlottesville having studied or had children that studied at the University of Virginia or worshipped at Beth Israel, all of us as Jews feel the horror of the events of this past weekend.
Daryl Messinger, chairperson of the Union for Reform Judaism, wrote: "Our hearts, prayers and unwavering support goes out to Alan, his Rabbis Gutherz and Schmelkin and the entire congregation. Their courage and leadership are incredible. And I know we will all continue to act to stop this hate, racism and antisemitism."
Letter from the President of the Charlottesville, VA Reform Congregation
At Congregation Beth Israel in Charlottesville, VA, we are deeply grateful for the support and prayers of the broader Reform Jewish community. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of Heather Heyer and the two Virginia State Police officers, H. Jay Cullen and Berke Bates, who lost their lives on Saturday, and with the many people injured in the attack who are still recovering.
The loss of life far outweighs any fear or concern felt by me or the Jewish community during the past several weeks as we braced for this Nazi rally – but the effects of both will each linger.
On Saturday morning, I stood outside our synagogue with the armed security guard we hired after the police department refused to provide us with an officer during morning services. (Even the police department’s limited promise of an observer near our building was not kept — and note, we did not ask for protection of our property, only our people as they worshipped).
Forty congregants were inside. Here’s what I witnessed during that time.
For half an hour, three men dressed in fatigues and armed with semi-automatic rifles stood across the street from the temple. Had they tried to enter, I don’t know what I could have done to stop them, but I couldn’t take my eyes off them, either. Perhaps the presence of our armed guard deterred them. Perhaps their presence was just a coincidence, and I’m paranoid. I don’t know.
Several times, parades of Nazis passed our building, shouting, “There's the synagogue!” followed by chants of “Seig Heil” and other anti-Semitic language. Some carried flags with swastikas and other Nazi symbols.
A guy in a white polo shirt walked by the synagogue a few times, arousing suspicion. Was he casing the building, or trying to build up courage to commit a crime? We didn’t know. Later, I noticed that the man accused in the automobile terror attack wore the same polo shirt as the man who kept walking by our synagogue; apparently it’s the uniform of a white supremacist group. Even now, that gives me a chill.
When services ended, my heart broke as I advised congregants that it would be safer to leave the temple through the back entrance rather than through the front, and to please go in groups.
This is 2017 in the United States of America.
Later that day, I arrived on the scene shortly after the car plowed into peaceful protesters. It was a horrific and bloody scene.
Soon, we learned that Nazi websites had posted a call to burn our synagogue. I sat with one of our rabbis and wondered whether we should go back to the temple to protect the building. What could I do if I were there? Fortunately, it was just talk – but we had already deemed such an attack within the realm of possibilities, taking the precautionary step of removing our Torahs, including a Holocaust scroll, from the premises.
Again: This is in America in 2017.
At the end of the day, we felt we had no choice but to cancel a Havdalah service at a congregant’s home. It had been announced on a public Facebook page, and we were fearful that Nazi elements might be aware of the event. Again, we sought police protection – not a battalion of police, just a single officer – but we were told simply to cancel the event.
Local police faced an unprecedented problem that day, but make no mistake, Jews are a specific target of these groups, and despite nods of understanding from officials about our concerns – and despite the fact that the mayor himself is Jewish – we were left to our own devices. The fact that a calamity did not befall the Jewish community of Charlottesville on Saturday was not thanks to our politicians, our police, or even our own efforts, but to the grace of God.
And yet, in the midst of all that, other moments stand out for me, as well.
John Aguilar, a 30-year Navy veteran, took it upon himself to stand watch over the synagogue through services Friday evening and Saturday, along with our armed guard. He just felt he should.
We experienced wonderful turnout for services both Friday night and Saturday morning to observe Shabbat, including several non-Jews who said they came to show solidarity (though a number of congregants, particularly elderly ones, told me they were afraid to come to synagogue).
A frail, elderly woman approached me Saturday morning as I stood on the steps in front of our sanctuary, crying, to tell me that while she was Roman Catholic, she wanted to stay and watch over the synagogue with us. At one point, she asked, “Why do they hate you?” I had no answer to the question we’ve been asking ourselves for thousands of years.
At least a dozen complete strangers stopped by as we stood in front the synagogue Saturday to ask if we wanted them to stand with us.
And our wonderful rabbis stood on the front lines with other Charlottesville clergy, opposing hate.
Most attention now is, and for the foreseeable future will be, focused on the deaths and injuries that occurred, and that is as it should be. But for most people, before the week is out, Saturday’s events will degenerate into the all-to-familiar bickering that is part of the larger, ongoing political narrative. The media will move on — and all it will take is some new outrageous Trump tweet to change the subject.
We will get back to normal, also. We have two b’nai mitzvah coming up, and soon, Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur will be upon us, too.
After the nation moves on, we will be left to pick up the pieces. Fortunately, this is a very strong and capable Jewish community, blessed to be led by incredible rabbis. We have committed lay leadership, and a congregation committed to Jewish values and our synagogue. In some ways, we will come out of it stronger – just as tempering metals make them tougher and harder.
Alan Zimmerman is the president of Congregation Beth Israel in Charlottesville, VA.
Hatred is not welcome here and it will not be tolerated. We must all band together to confront bigotry, prejudice, racism, homophobia, Islamophobia, sexism, and other forms of oppression. We must unite to overcome the ignorance and the hatred. We must return love for hate as MLK, Jr. once said.
This is what we need: More instances of people recognizing and acting on the principle: An injury to one is an injury to all.
Forgot to mention that Neo-Nazis marched and chanted anti-semitic slurs, so let’s not forget antisemitism is alive and well in America.
Pls send this post to the news media if not already done.
Yes. This is important.
Only one person is to blame for this shame–Trump
I also blame all Republican congressmen and state and local Republicans who have not spoken out against this terrible President.
What an extraordinarily moving testament. Wow.
Yes. I too hope that the statement gets national attention.
I know that congregation from when I was younger. This is breaking my heart in ways I did not know it could break. Please share this widely.
May we all find peace in our hearts and the courage to stand together to ensure it.
Blessings!
And how sad that it is 2017 and this has to be revisited .
Our nation cannot let hatred and threatening behavior interfere in the lives of our fellow Americans. Everyone in our nation should read this post and take action to support and protect those threatened by the factions who are attempting to reign in terror.
Absolutely APPALLING!!!! Trump;s divide and conquer will ruin us yet if he is not stopped. I cannot pull the number out of my hat exactly but the number of hate groups in the U. S. has increased in the last two years beyond belief.
When the freedoms of one group are diminished, ALL groups are diminished. God created us all. We are or should be brothers.
We have become a fearful nation kicking out at perceived enemies. Counterproductive to the Nth degree.
Where this will lead only God know. I personally fear for our future.
When In Germany a few years ago I saw evidence that they NEVER wished to endure what they had under Nazi rule. Under the Brandenburg gate there was a s:”Stille Raum”, a “quiet room”, a place in which to go, to pray, to mediate etc.fior peace.
For people who have endured such an appalling history, THEY do not wish to go there.
In D. C. there is in the holocaust museum a sign which we MUST take to heart. It details what to look for when in danger of such a governance.. I wish i could find and post it here. You can however go on line and bring the sign up. I recommend that.
“God created us all.”
I beg to differ.
Hi señor Swacker:
Heh heh heh, Where is Satan? Where is Hell? I guess that is why you beg to differ.
I wonder why we are on Earth. Why don’t we live in Heaven for God who create us all? Ah! Humans refuse to be in Heaven and love to be on earth in order to learn and to experience with Satan’s servants.
I hope that you will have a good time in Oakland in October NPE Conference. Please take good care of your health. May
Make no mistake, the Charlottesville Nazi, White Supremacy march was not about protesting the removal of a Confederate statue. It was clearly aimed at Jews. They did not shout, down with Black Lives Matter, Antifa. Occupy Democrats or any counter demonstrator. The only target here was Jews. As this letter confirms, the synagogue was in their sites and their goal was a progrom! Donald Trump emboldening this group and others like it, similar incidents are likely to increase as he continues to spew his ideas of moral equivalency! When the alt right and the alt left begin to have common cause such as BDS and other anti Israel/Jewish/Zionist causes alarm bells should be ringing across the nation. As educators, we must take up the mantle of reversing the hate! When we encourage denigration of one people in favor elevating another we will face something too horrible to imagine. We must embrace our failures as a nation and not support tearing down all evidence of our sordid past. If we do continue to sanitize our history we run the risk of repeating it!
BDS is not “anti-Israel”. It’s anti-illegal occupation of Palestinian territories by Israeli forces. It is, incidentally, a wholly legal protest movement using peaceful tactics of boycotting, divesting and otherwise economically sanctioning an organization whose political positions and actions one disagrees with – no different than boycotting Chick-fil-A because they don’t support gays or Amazon because they do.
This incident in Charlottesville should help people understand what Palestinians in Israel go through every day – the constant fear of violence from a hostile occupying force. Most of the rest of the world sees this. Americans are among the few who do not.
By no means is violence against innocent Jews acceptable and I am not in any way condoning the violence in Charlottesville. But let’s not conflate the hatred of alt-right groups for anyone different than them (racism, anti-semitism, etc.) with legitimate protest of oppressive policies and tactics.
dienne77 is correct. The BDS Campaign is non-violent, it is not an attempt to de-legitimize Israel as a state. It does, however, intend to persuade or pressure the Israeli government to change its policies that are detrimental to the health and safety of Palestinians. End the ugly and brutal military occupation and stop further illegal settlement construction.
Sorry, but you are both very wrong, Dienne and Will. I have been writing here explicit reports of how the world wide, heavily financed, Palestinian movement is NOT a student movement now, and it is joined at the hip (certainly at California campuses, and from many reports, it is rampant and violent all over America and all over the world) with the same neo-Nazi movement pushed by Bannon and his
Breitbart thugs, Spencer, the KKK, Trump/Pence now, and various Middle Eastern despots. Their goal is to rid the world of every single Jew…it is patterned on Hitlers’ ‘Final Solution’. Read about it online…just google Jew Watch.
Please read more widely at The Forward, Algemeiner, the Middle East Institute, Gladstone…and other media published by academics, legislators, and legitimate journalist.
My experiences trying to protect young Jewish students at UCLA, plus Irvine and Davis campuses, is graphic and can be found in
Diane’s archives. Our University of California Board of Regents continues to wrestle with what is free speech and what is hate speech. It my community this has often risen to situations that were violent….and calling for police help is very ‘iffy’ since too many have long been associated with the ‘skinhead’ White Power movement. We remember Chief Darryl Gates keeping his offices on the fringe, as
Los Angeles burned down re the Rodney King debacle.
Always saddens, and angers, me when some of Diane’s members jump on the BDS and anti Israel bandwagon the moment she publishes anything on anti Semitism.
Sorry, but, no. There may be hostile alt-right forces trying to capitalize on and commandeer the BDS movement, but the BDS movement itself is a peaceful, legal protest movement against the toxic and brutal Israeli occupation and settlement of Palestinian territories.
https://bdsmovement.net/
Of course, Dienne, you link to the carefully controlled, but vast Palestinian movement, site.
Try doing some real research and diverse reading….I mentioned some you can start with. Stand on the campus of your nearest local university and watch this unfold in the real world.
Sigh. You’re not the arbiter of the “real world”, Ellen. I’m sorry you don’t see that Israel is brutally occupying and oppressing the Palestinians. I’m sorry you don’t think the Palestinians have a right to defend themselves in their own country. But the fact remains that Israel is an apartheid state every bit equivalent to South Africa back in the day. The Palestinians don’t want to delegitimize or eliminate Israel. They just want to be able to live in peace, which they haven’t been able to since the Nabke in 1967, Again, boycott and other economic sanctions are legal and valid methods of protesting an apartheid regime. At least, I certainly hope you would agree it beats rockets and mortars.
You have completely twisted my information to suit your point of view…this is not a way to change Israeli policy (which BTW I often disagree with). Please read real history about the Balfour Declaration, the White Paper, Trans Jordan, Arafat and Clinton, and the past many hundreds years of years in the Middle East viewing cultural anthropology and religion, and infighting. And of current history and the one and two state potential solutions and how each could affect each population. I do not claim to be the “arbiter” you accuse me of, but I do offer my own opinion which you seem to always need to challenge with sarcasm rather with facts.
I find the constant repetition of the BDS ‘party line’, without even venturing to see how this is playing out on campuses, and without reading deeply about the huge political intrusions by the Saudis, the Iranian mullahs, and others to influence the outcomes, makes me sad and worried about the state of American education which too often does not produce deep thinkers, particularly in the areas of history, philosophy, and political science.
Why parse whether or not the rally just targeted Jews? We know and have evidence that the White Nationalists, Nazis, KKK also target other groups. The point of the story (I think) is that we need to stand together to protect everyone, or anyone is vulnerable.
Arthur…I cannot fathom protecting fascists. And I cannot help but worry about the language I see and hear each day about totally ridding the world of Jews (which is strengthened by some who do not read widely and do not understand history). Southern Poverty Law Center reports on this often, with stats.
But I agree that communities of color, and those who are defamed and murdered by radical religious followers who throw gay people off roof tops and chop of heads of infidels, and for protecting the safety and democratic institutions of all the innocents who are overcome by this deadly element which now openly parades in our nation under the guise of “free speech” and the 1st Amendment, we all must ban together and face the onslaught of Trump and his biggest admirer, David Duke, who says he is only doing Trump’s bidding, and their clones all over our nation. Yes, we must stand together to fight this growing threat.
I don’t know. Seems rather coincidental that white supremecist rally events took place on Friday evening and Saturday. Do not these times coincide with the Sabbath? Or am I connecting the dots a little too much?
Agree. I am old enough to have experienced that the KKK in addition to being racist and anti Semitic was also hell bent on fighting Roman Catholics and spreading anti Catholicism. It’s one of the reasons my parents sent me to parochial school. We are a country of diversity. Every one of us is responsible for speaking out against hate groups and calling out anyone who doesn’t tolerate differences.
Thank you for posting this so I could share with my friends who have the same views that I have.
White supremacist groups are ALL terrorists and terrorists feed off the fear they cause. The more fear they sense in their victims, the more emboldened they will become.
But bullies fear someone who has no fear and is willing to fight back at any sign of intimidation by bullies. These bullies do not fear people who turn the other cheek and refuse to defend themselves and attack terrorists. Like all bullies, when they know they have a willing victim, they act with violence and justified hate and focus their hate on that willing victim.
Do not go quietly into the night like millions did during World War II when the knock came at their doors and they went willingly to be murdered.
If it gets that bad here in the U.S., I won’t open the door when they knock. I’ll peek out to make sure it’s them, and then start shooting through the closed and locked door hoping I’ll get as many of them before they take me out. I’m going to have to buy more ammo if the white supremacists keep this up.
Exactly Lloyd, thanks for this reminder..
DO NOT GO QUIETLY and yes, I am shouting this…remember the Warsaw Ghetto. And looking at Trump’s still faithful (mind boggling) Jewish appointments, particularly Cohen and Mnuchin, wonder if he has them under contract to be the ‘kapos’ when he establishes the camp?. Wonder if my friends, my black neighbors next door, my Latino neighbors two houses away, and my family including my two little blonde blue-eyed grandsons, will end up interned at Santa Anita Race Track using the same plans that were used when interning our Japanese citizens during WW2. Or is he already building gas chambers and maybe planning for us to be his golden lamp shades?
People who do not understand history are dooming so many of us when history repeats itself…my twist on Santayana.
Mr. Trump said, “But, they were there to protest – excuse me – you take a look the night before, they were there to protest the taking down of the statue of Robert E. Lee.”
Well, let’s “take a look [at] the night before.” On that night, the neo-Nazis were conducting a tiki-torch march straight out of a Leni Riefenstahl propaganda film and chanting, as they marched, “Jews will not replace us.”
YES.
Thank you so much, Diane, for posting this. Extraordinarily moving. And your comments about Lee earlier today, exactly to the point. He was a traitor. Lincoln offered him command of the United States Army. He chose, instead, to take up arms against his country.
YES.
It is most interesting that Ivanka Trump and hubby have been out of the national spotlight since this horrific Charlottesville hatred march! These days I wouldn’t put it past Trump senior to kill 2 birds with one stone… taking attention off Jared’s lawbreaking and appeasing his “deplorable Nazi voters” at the same time!!!
Good point..hadn’t though of that part, but even more so, taking the focus off Mueller and cadre of great fraud and criminal lawyers who are now holding a Grand Jury about Trump and Company’s
Russia businesses and collusions. Jared the kids seem to be taking lots of vacations lately. Wonder how much we pay for that.
Scary to think how much. But I am sure it amounts to more than the average teachers total salary over an entire career (well the few teachers who make it to retirement these days). Just wondering… have Ivanka and Jared earned govt pensions!!
It is most interesting that Ivanka Trump and hubby have been out of the national spotlight since this horrific Charlottesville hatred march! These days I wouldn’t put it past Trump senior to kill 2 birds with one stone… taking attention off Jared’s lawbreaking and appeasing his “deplorable Nazi voters” at the same time!!!
I was away from computers most of yesterday. I didn’t see this post until now. Stunning. Sickening. Tragic.
Neo-Nazis, fascists and white supremacists are always there, seething under their rocks, waiting for opportune moments to emerge.
Of all the scary/anger-inducing aspects of Saturday’s events, the scariest is that the police, always quick to go full militarized Robocop with anti-war and BLM demonstrators, was busy looking at its fingernails while heavily-armed Nazis paraded, murdered, and manipulated democratic practices – free speech, the right to assemble, etc. – to destroy democracy.
It makes me wish I’d received military training as a youth.
Yesher Koach, Alan!
Thank you for sharing what you and your synagogue are are enduring with such strength and forbearance.
We stand with you.
Shalom U’Vracha,
Ellen Fuchs
Member, Peninsula Temple Beth El
San Mateo, California
It was difficult to read your post through my tears of sadness–sadness for the families of the three people who were killed, sadness for the Jewish community in Charlottesville, sadness for all Jews in the United States, sadness for all in our country who feel marginalized, and deep sadness for our country.
Your words were difficult to read, but they also offered light in the darkness. When you told the stories of those who stood with you i felt hope that i, too, can be a person of courage becauseI when we simply hate those who hate us—hate has won.
One thing I can do is gather other clergy persons in our city and find ways to stand with our Jewish sisters and brothers in these days.
Thank you.
Brought me to tears