At Pittsburgh gunman’s trial, Jewish rituals feature as prominently as deadly carnage

PITTSBURGH (JTA) — Testifying at the trial of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooter, Carol Black described how, right before he opened fire, she had taken her yarmulke and tallis out of her velvet tallis bag.

But first, she had to explain what a yarmulke, tallis and tallis bag were.

“In my briefcase is a blue velvet bag that has a zipper on it,” she said. “I have a Ziploc bag of yarmulkes I would wear and a tallis I would wear.” A yarmulke was a “head covering,” she explained, and a tallis was a “prayer shawl.” The items, she said, “just signified being in the presence of God and being respectful.”

Black, 71, was the second witness to testify on Wednesday, the second day of the capital murder trial of the alleged gunman, Robert Bowers. She was one of a few witnesses who interspersed heart-rending testimony about the trial with, effectively, a crash course on Jewish ritual.

Black recalled how she sat in the second seat in from the aisle, because the aisle seat was where her brother Richard Gottfried sat, and they shared gabbai duties. Then Black explained the role of a “gabbai” — calling congregants to the Torah and helping them read through a passage. She described Pesukei d’Zimra, the morning service’s opening prayers, and spelled out the Hebrew name of the morning service, Shacharit, for the court reporter.

Get The Times of Israel's Daily Edition by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to the terms

“I had just started to open the bag and I heard a loud bang,” she said. “To me it sounded like somebody had dropped a table on the metal floor.”

She added, “The first two sounds, I didn’t recognize them as gunfire. You don’t go to a synagogue and expect to hear gunfire.”

The focus of the trial is the gunfire — the shooting on October 27, 2018 that killed 11 Jews praying at three congregations: Tree of Life, New Light and Dor Hadash. But for the prosecution, explaining the synagogue — and the practices that take place in it — is also proving to be crucial. The painful collision on that Shabbat morning of the sacred and the profane is key to the prosecution’s case that the defendant merits the death penalty.

In this courtroom sketch, Robert Bowers, the suspect in the 2018 synagogue massacre, is on trial in federal court in Pittsburgh, on May 30, 2023. (David Klug via AP)

Of the 63 federal charges Bowers is facing, 22 are capital crimes: two for each of the 11 fatalities that morning, including Black’s brother, Richard Gottfried. One is “obstruction of free exercise of religious beliefs resulting in death” and the other is murder, enhanced with a hate crime charge. So prosecutors, seeking to show that the shooting was motivated by antisemitism, are probing witnesses about their Judaism and how they express it.

“As they did every Saturday, men and women of the Jewish faith made their way to the synagogue, to observe Shabbat,” Assistant US Attorney Soo Song said in her opening statement on Tuesday. “To pray to God in the sanctity and refuge of their shared Jewish faith.”

Conversely, defense lawyer Judy Clarke is out to prove that her client targeted the congregants not because of their religion per se but because of a delusion that they were facilitating an immigration invasion to replace whites. Both she and prosecutors have said in court that he committed the attack.

Clarke occasionally objected when the testimony veered into how American Jews worship, or into explaining what animates Jewish practice. None of her objections to explaining Judaism were sustained — including one where she had tried to preempt the director of one of the congregations’ religious schools from explaining its educational precepts.

Members of Pittsburgh’s Jewish community enter the Federal courthouse in Pittsburgh for the first day of trial for Robert Bowers, the suspect in the 2018 synagogue massacre on Tuesday, May 30, 2023, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski)

Describing the curriculum, Wendy Kobee, the director of the religious school of Dor Hadash, a Reconstructionist congregation, said, “Religious prayers, religious practices, cultural values.”

“Among the cultural values taught at the school was the concept of welcoming the stranger?” prosecutor Mary Hahn asked.

“Yes, that would have been incorporated into the curriculum in an age-appropriate way,” Kobee said.

Both the defense and prosecution acknowledge that the defendant, a white supremacist, targeted the building because Dor Hadash had partnered with HIAS, the Jewish refugee aid group, to celebrate what the group called National Refugee Shabbat.

The trial is shaping up as a seminar on American Jewish tradition. Witnesses have provided the judge, jury and spectators with an impromptu glossary of Jewish terms, and an introduction to parts of modern Jewish thought. Dan Leger, a member of Dor Hadash who was injured in the attack, outlined the teachings of the Reconstructionist movement’s founder, Rabbi Mordecai Kaplan.

Kaplan’s “approach is one of looking at the Bible, the Torah specifically as something that guides our life in ways that give value in social interaction,” Leger said. “One of the ways it is most highly demonstrated is welcoming those into the community who need assistance, who need support whether or not they are Jewish, welcoming immigrants into the country.”

The victims of the Pittsburgh Tree of Life synagogue shooting, October 27, 2018. (Facebook/Google Maps/JTA Collage)

Prosecutors also asked witnesses about Jewish practice in order to explain what happened on the day of the shooting. Song asked Leger to explain tallit katan, the small prayer shawl colloquially known as tzitzit that observant men traditionally wear under their clothing, and why he did not have a cell phone handy when the gunman opened fire. It was Shabbat, when some Jews abstain from using electronic devices, he explained.

Another prosecutor asked Barry Werber, who testified later, why he preferred to attend services at New Light on Friday night and for Sunday breakfasts and not on Saturdays. He liked to sleep in on Saturdays, he said, but he went to services on the morning of the shooting because he felt obliged to honor his mother on her yahrzeit. He explained that a yahrzeit was the anniversary of someone’s death.

Like Tree of Life’s rabbi, Jeffrey Myers, had on Tuesday, Leger testified that he recited the Shema when he believed he was dying, after the gunman shot him in the abdomen. He translated the Torah verse and central Jewish prayer for the jury. Leger, a retired registered nurse, and another Dor Hadash congregant, Jerry Rabinowitz, a physician, had run into the shooting to help the injured. Rabinowitz was killed.

“I thought about the wonder of my life, the beauty of it all, the happiness I had experienced, the joy of having two beautiful sons and a wonderful wife and the wife previous to that wife, all the wonderful friends I have in the world,” Leger said. “I prayed for forgiveness for those who I have wronged in my life. I was ready to go.”

The defendant, wearing a dark blue sweater and a light blue collared shirt, his arms folded, stared at Leger.

In his testimony on Tuesday, reported by CNN, Myers said a photo entered into evidence of a Siddur with a bullet hole was “a witness to the horror of the day.”

Damaged religious items are buried according to Jewish custom, he testified, explaining he decided to keep the damaged prayer book.

A powerful image of a Jewish prayer book damaged with a bullet hole was released as evidence in the death penalty trial of the man accused of killing 11 worshippers at a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018. https://t.co/yr7cnTw3SN

— CNN International (@cnni) May 31, 2023

“One day when I’m not there, this book tells a story that needs to be told,” he said.

The stories on the witness stand offered windows into American Jewish families and history. Gottfried started attending New Light after his mother died in 1992, Black testified about her brother, but she said she remained uninterested in frequent synagogue attendance until she injured a hip running about a decade ago. Gottfried, who was younger, encouraged her to come to services, and she celebrated her bat mitzvah as an adult.

“In Uniontown [Pennsylvania] where I grew up, in our Conservative congregation, which incidentally was called Tree of Life, girls did not get bat mitzvahed,” she said.

Black and Werber both discussed the social aspect of Shabbat services, describing the propensity of Melvin Wax, a New Light congregant, to tell jokes. Werber recalled that just before the shooting, Wax was telling jokes to Cecil Rosenthal.

Yet along with descriptions of how ritual and prayer bound the synagogue communities together, the testimonies all came back to the horrific details of the shooting itself.

Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, right, of Tree of Life/Or L’Simcha Congregation hugs Rabbi Cheryl Klein, left, of Dor Hadash Congregation and Rabbi Jonathan Perlman during a community gathering held in the aftermath of a deadly shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh, October 28, 2018. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

After sitting with Wax, Werber said, Rosenthal went back upstairs, where the gunman shot him multiple times. Down in the New Light sanctuary, Rabbi Jonathan Perlman led Werber, Wax and Black into a storeroom behind the bimah. Richard Gottfried was in an adjacent kitchen with another New Light congregant, Dan Stein, preparing breakfast for the next morning. He called 911.

The gunman came down the stairs and killed Gottfried and Stein. There was a pause, so Wax peeked out of the storeroom to see what was happening. The gunman shot him twice, and he fell at Black’s feet. The gunman hovered a while in the area and then retreated.

Eventually, emergency responders found the group hidden in the store room. Wax’s body still lay there.

“I had to step over him to get past him,” Black testified, her voice cracking. “Quietly to myself I said goodbye to him and followed the officers.”

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report


Football news:

<!DOCTYPE html>
Kane on Tuchel: A wonderful man, full of ideas. Thomas in person says what he thinks
Zarema about Kuziaev's 350,000 euros a year in Le Havre: Translate it into rubles - it's not that little. It is commendable that he left
Aleksandr Mostovoy on Wendel: Two months of walking around in the middle of nowhere and then coming back and dragging the team - that's top level
Sheffield United have bought Euro U21 champion Archer from Aston Villa for £18.5million
Alexander Medvedev on SKA: Without Gazprom, there would be no Zenit titles. There is a winning wave in the city. The next victory in the Gagarin Cup will be in the spring
Smolnikov ended his career at the age of 35. He became the Russian champion three times with Zenit

3:16 At least 16 killed, dozens injured in mass shooting in Maine
2:46 French soccer league suspends player for sharing antisemitic social media post
1:59 Biden and PM discuss freeing hostages held by Hamas, letting foreigners out of Gaza
1:35 ‘Glory to our martyrs’ protected onto building at George Washington University
1:35 ‘Glory to our martyrs’ projected onto building at George Washington University
1:11 Ministry issues ‘protocol for treatment’ of freed captives after press event slammed
0:51 Biden: There’s no going back to pre-war status quo, there must be vision of 2 states
23:23 Cooper Union Jewish students attacked by pro-Palestinian student group
23:23 WATCH: Cooper Union Jewish students attacked by pro-Palestinian student group
22:14 Settlers rampage through Palestinian olive grove, harass activists in West Bank
22:12 Nineteen days since the massacre, Israel has achieved nothing. It’s time to go in
22:10 Israeli and Jewish-owned restaurants in the US are raising money for Hamas victims
22:09 The war with Hamas could threaten Israel’s imports
21:27 6 lightly hurt following rocket barrage from Gaza toward central, southern Israel
21:27 6 lightly hurt in rocket barrage from Gaza toward central, southern Israel
21:15 Irish Wix employee fired for inflammatory posts about Israel-Hamas war
20:51 UN chief doubles down on Hamas remarks, decries ‘misrepresentations’
20:50 Israeli Opera soloists sing ‘Bring Him Home,’ for Gaza captives
20:09 Netanyahu: Following war, everyone will have to answer for failures, ‘including me’
20:09 Netanyahu: After the war, everyone will have to answer for failures, ‘including me’
20:05 Ending weeks of gridlock, Republicans elect Trump ally Mike Johnson as House speaker
19:17 Israel said to delay Gaza invasion to allow US to bolster air defenses in region
19:09 500 Hamas, PIJ terrorists trained for October 7 attack in Iran last month – report
19:04 Danny Vovk, 45: ZAKA diver fended off 20 terrorists before death
18:57 Palestinian arrested in Brussels for talk about planning a suicide bombing
18:50 Noam Slotki, 31, Yishay Slotki, 24: Brothers fought and died together
18:46 Barkat slams Treasury, presents rival emergency aid plan for war-affected businesses
18:41 Sgt. Yarin Peled, 20: Medic who scrawled last request facing death
18:39 Serving up love: Israelis see war as catalyst to matchmake
18:35 Ben Mizrachi, 22: Former IDF medic killed while helping others
17:52 Senate panel okays Biden’s pick for Israel envoy, with final vote likely next week
17:37 NYPD data shows spike in antisemitic attacks during Israel-Hamas war
17:28 Germany seeks to bar antisemites from gaining citizenship amid spike in incidents
17:25 4 עקרונות מפתח לחינוך בעת מלחמה
16:59 Arab Israeli actress freed to house arrest amid alleged Hamas support
15:18 משרד הבריאות: חטופים שישוחררו יטופלו במתחם נפרד בבית החולים
15:18 חטופים שישוחררו יטופלו במתחם נפרד: "לתעד עדויות לפשעי מלחמה"
15:18 מתחם נפרד לטיפול בחטופים הבאים שישוחררו: "לתעד פשעי מלחמה"
15:08 Jordan queen skeptical Israeli children were beheaded by Hamas during onslaught
15:05 Hostage negotiators say pilloried Israeli envoy a nonfactor in talks
14:49 Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen resumes testimony in business fraud lawsuit
14:48 Rights group reports over 100 assaults by settlers on Palestinians since war’s start
13:36 בגלל מחסור במאבטחים: בתי החולים הונחו לגבש כיתות כוננות
13:05 "הקליעים חוררו את הציורים": האמנית זיוה ילין הצילה את עבודותיה מקיבוץ בארי
12:55 "החזרה לשגרה של הילדים האלה היא המשימה הגדולה שלנו כמבוגרים"
12:24 יהיה בסדר? סמוטריץ', תקשיב לרופאים | טור
10:37 השר עמיחי אליהו: "לסגור את התאגיד, הוא מחליש את הרוח"
8:14 מאמר בכתב עת רפואי: "ישראל תקפה את בית החולים בעזה, הכיבוש אשם"
10:18 בואו נדבר על ביטחון: האם ללמוד בבית ספר או בזום?
8:52 אנשי החינוך, אתם המנהיגים האמיתיים שלנו
11:35 Gaza group threatens renewal of border clashes, blaming ‘desecration’ of Temple Mount
11:21 Daily Briefing Oct. 1: How ‘Jewish space missiles’ will soon protect Germany’s skies
10:25 This artist sees romantic realism at the beach, in a hammock and on the street
10:25 Artist sees romantic realism at the beach, in a hammock and on the street
10:15 Dingy carrying foreign nationals’ ID papers, but no people, washes up in Netanya
9:43 סרטן שד בישראל: פחות נשים מאובחנות, יותר נשים מאובחנות בשלב מוקדם
8:53 אישה אושפזה במצב קשה ברמב"ם עקב שתיית אלכוהול מזויף
8:37 Suicide bomber detonates device in Turkish capital, wounding 2 police officers
8:33 Pro-Russia former premier leads leftist party to victory in Slovakia elections
8:15 After 75 years, IDF identifies remains of soldier killed in War of Independence
7:58 After shots fired, kibbutz residents enter nearby Palestinian village
7:32 גילי ניצלה ממפרצת נדירה, המנתח: "כזה דבר לא ראיתי מעולם"
7:24 Explosion heard in Turkish capital, media report
5:59 Palestinian-Italian student, held by Israel for a month, faces court hearing
5:00 מה הקשר בין אהוד אולמרט לרוברט דה נירו?
4:05 כל מה שרצית לדעת על הנקה: התנוחה, התדירות והקשיים | המדריך המלא
3:56 כוננות שפעת: עלייה באשפוזי ילדים בחצי הכדור הדרומי
3:49 Yom Kippur War a needed ‘slap in the face,’ says vet who helped reverse battle’s tide
2:59 NJ megamall to offer gender-segregated swimming on Sukkot for Orthodox clientele
2:11 Is Poland’s government shooting itself in the foot with its cooling stance on Ukraine?
1:29 Threat of shutdown ends as Congress passes temporary funding plan, sends it to Biden
1:18 Jimmy Carter admirers across generations celebrate former president’s 99th birthday
0:58 IDF reportedly strikes Iranian weapons shipment near Damascus
0:13 Haredi MK: Yom Kippur scuffles prove anti-gov’t protesters waging ‘religious war’
22:34 90% of ethnic Armenians flee Karabakh enclave overrun by Azerbaijan army
22:13 Democrat pulls fire alarm in House building amid vote on bill to prevent shutdown
21:35 Last-gasp House drama moves US away from government shutdown
21:20 Dozens arrested in Iran in demonstration commemorating ‘Bloody Friday’ anniversary
20:45 Five dead, five hurt in Illinois collision that leaked toxic substance
20:32 Eritrean man stabbed to death in Netanya, in latest brawl between migrants
20:29 Female prison guards, officials to be questioned over alleged sex scandal
19:32 New York City begins to dry out after record rainfall, intense flooding
19:31 ‘You won’t divide us’: Protesters against overhaul rally for a 39th weekend
18:59 Azerbaijan says serviceman killed by sniper, Armenia denies incident
18:43 Head of think tank behind overhaul push says it was rushed, poorly prepared
18:24 Arab man shot and killed in north, community’s 11th murder this week
16:08 Man stabbed to death in Jerusalem in apparent criminal incident
16:05 Women of the Senate remember Dianne Feinstein as tireless fighter, true friend
15:46 Chicago Sukkot festival reflects on complex history between city’s Blacks and Jews
14:07 Netanyahus set to vacation again at Golan Heights hotel, despite local opposition
13:54 A New York exhibit explores the etrog’s journey around the Jewish world
13:54 Thick-skinned world traveler: NYC exhibit explores the life and times of the etrog
11:04 Musk wades into German political debate over migrant ‘invasion’
10:17 יותר מ-100 אלף איש ברחו לארמניה: "האזרים ישחטו את כולם"
10:15 Thousands expected at 39th week of anti-overhaul demonstrations
10:15 Tens of thousands expected at 39th week of anti-overhaul demonstrations
9:33 Putin marks anniversary of annexation of Ukrainian regions as drones attack
8:41 Jerusalem Latin Patriarch among 21 new cardinals anointed by Pope
6:42 US on brink on government shutdown, funding chaos
5:37 US pro-Palestinian group lauds Second Intifada that ‘renewed flame of resistance’