How many jewish people died in 911




















No longer did they face a threat born of terror groups based half a world away; now, a white supremacist American man had entered a synagogue and murdered 11 Jews at prayer.

The Pittsburgh shooting was the worst attack amid a yearslong rise in antisemitic incidents. Along with the synagogue shooting in Poway six months later, plus a string of antisemitic street assaults in New York City, it led synagogues, schools and community centers to apply for government security grants, debate whether to hire guards, and even consider whether congregants should be armed.

But in , following the attacks, umbrella communal groups decided to organize their own security organization as well. The Society for the Advancement of Judaism, a Reconstructionist synagogue in Manhattan, began bolstering its security after the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia and the Pittsburgh attack the next year. The synagogue used to keep its doors open; now someone checks bags at the entrance. And it asks for a special donation from members to cover security costs.

And even security officials who favor close cooperation with law enforcement say American Jews need not prepare for the intense fortifications that surround many European synagogues, such as thick walls, armed guards and metal detectors.

Our institutions are as much a part of the North American landscape as any other house of worship. It has even found its way into newer conspiracy theories like QAnon.

And the January 6 insurrection drove home the danger of homegrown extremism. But the letter focused on forms of antisemitism that have appeared to surge more recently — white supremacy, a wave of assaults surrounding the Israel-Hamas conflict in May, and a spike in Holocaust denialism and trivialization connected to the pandemic.

While the Pittsburgh attack led many institutions to hire guards and consider arming themselves, the racial justice protests last year led some to look again at the effects of requesting a police presence at their doors.

Rabbi Michael Adam Latz, senior rabbi of Shir Tikvah, a synagogue in Minneapolis, recalled what he suggested was a different model of finding safety following the Pittsburgh attack. His synagogue has invested in building relationships with nearby Christian and Muslim congregations, and following the shooting, members of those congregations stood in a circle around his synagogue in a show of solidarity.

And they know that if I am not safe neither are they. Some Jews in New York also demur from focusing Jewish resources on combating hate. Rabbi Mordechai Lightstone, who runs social media for Chabad. Discussions of physical security have become de rigueur at most synagogues in the United States, and many view physical security measures as a necessity.

Report an Incident. Following the September 11, terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, a rumor circulated on the Internet claimed that 4, Jews did not report to work, or "called in sick" that morning. It suggested that no Jews died because they somehow had foreknowledge of the attack.

There are several variations of this rumor, including one suggesting that Israel was behind the attacks. Such rumors are absurd. His identification was confirmed through DNA testing of remains recovered in , and , the statement added. The office said new identifications 20 years after the tragedy were being made possible by advances in DNA science. Its laboratory uses advanced testing to match DNA fragments from victims with samples provided by relatives.

In Streetwise Hebrew for the Times of Israel Community, each month we learn several colloquial Hebrew phrases around a common theme. These are bite-size audio Hebrew classes that we think you'll really enjoy.



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