Pittsburgh Synagogue Shooting

“It’s almost like, ‘Here we go again,’” 80-year-old Judah Samet said after narrowly escaping the massacre at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue.
A community comes together after the deadliest anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history.
The senator, who was one of many prominent Democrats sent a pipe bomb last week, condemned Saturday's shooting in Pittsburgh.
"Nobody in this country should have a semiautomatic weapon of war," the outspoken Golden State Warriors coach said.
The suspected gunman in the shooting had posted anti-Semitic messages on Gab, a social media site popular with alt-right activists and white nationalists.
We "honor the victims of the anti-Semitic attack," tweeted Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.
Former patient Michael Kerr said Jerry Rabinowitz helped him survive the "most terrifying time" of his life and had a reputation for “keeping us alive the longest.”
Bowers, an avowed anti-Semite, allegedly shouted "All Jews must die!" before killing at least eight people at the Tree of Life Congregation.
The shooting at the Tree of Life Or L’Simcha Congregation left at least 11 dead and six others wounded.