jews in the d continued from page 18 GARY GRAFF Gary Graff grew up in Squirrel Hill. He grew up at the Tree of Life syn- agogue. He went to Hebrew school there, was a bar mitzvah there, confirmed there. His family was active in the congregation and the Jewish commu- nity. They owned Prime Kosher Foods, the only kosher market in the area, and Graff ’s mother was Pittsburgh’s Renta Yenta, planning most of the local bar mitzvahs. “Between those two things, we knew most of the community,” says Graff, 57, and a Beverly Hills resident. “It’s a very, very tight community, both Jewish and overall,” he says. “But the Jewish community — generations of families live in the same house; the houses just get passed down to family mem- bers. Everyone knows everyone. It’s really remark- able how close of a community it is.” Graff, a music journalist who has contributed to the JN, says his parents’ memorial plaques are at Tree of Life. “I have family members still there, cousins,” he says. “I have a 95-year-old cousin who goes to shul there every week. He’s elderly, so he depends on the community for rides. Saturday, his ride was running late, so by the time he arrived everything was closed off. Given the ages of the victims, he could easily have been sitting with them. “I spent so much time in that building,” Graff says. “I wasn’t there during the shooting, but I can imagine it; I know it so well. The area where the shooting took place was my Hebrew school class when I was there. “It was — and is — such a vibrant community. To a Jewish population so suburban [like Metro Detroit], it would be hard to imagine what a unique environment it was and is,” Graff says. “Everything was so intertwined, the families and the other synagogues. Where the vigils were held Saturday night, it’s like a village square. “I knew five or six of the victims — from the time going back to the kosher supermarket. I remember [97-year-old] Rose Mallinger. The first to be identified was the son of one of my dad’s best Army buddies. He just became a grandfather; I helped his family move into his house. These are all people who were fixtures in the community. I remember them all. “I just keep going from very deep sorrow to great anger.” Graff, a Shabbat usher at Adat Shalom, was at shul Saturday morning as his congregation cele- brated its 75th anniversary. “I shared a good cry with [a fellow Squirrel Hill native] at shul Saturday night. “It could be anywhere, anytime,” he says. “It’s haunting.” — Lynne Konstantin, Arts editor 20 November 1 • 2018 jn Shabbat Solidarity: Motor City Stands with Steel City JEFF LASDAY Saturday night I was sitting in my son David’s apartment in Tel Aviv when my brother Mike received a text from a friend asking if he and all the family were OK. This is how we learned of the tragedy unfolding in Pittsburgh. We immediately turned on the TV. All of Israel watched the news from Pittsburgh. For my fam- ily, this was very, very personal. For Lori and me, Pittsburgh — Squirrel Hill — is home. It’s where we grew up. My mom, mother- in-law, aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews and nieces all still live in CAROL SUBAR YOFFEE Five years ago, Carol Subar Yoffee found a lot of comfort from her Squirrel Hill neighbor Cecil Rosenthal, who made a point of repeated- ly participating with the shivah minyan coming together after the death of her father, Seymour Subar. Now, Yoffee is determined to muster the strength needed to comfort the Rosenthal family as they mourn the tragic loss of both Cecil and his brother, David, bru- tally murdered at the Tree of Life. Yoffee, who grew up in Detroit The Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit announced a Shabbat Solidarity event the weekend of Nov. 2-3 at congregations throughout the area in memory of the victims from the shooting last Shabbat at Tree of Life Congregation in Pittsburgh. Congregations across Jewish Detroit — and throughout the nation — will host a special Shabbat service to remember the 11 Jews killed at the Squirrel Hill community synagogue. Help honor their memory and repudiate the poisonous legacy of anti-Semitism by filling our congrega- tions during Shabbat as a proud and unified community. A list of local congregations can be found at jewishdetroit.org/resources/ congregations. There is no cost, nor do you need to be a member to attend. Visit the con- gregation websites to confirm location and times of Shabbat services. If you would like to contribute to Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh’s Victims of Terror Fund, go to https://jewishpgh.org/our-victims- of-terror-fund. All funds collected are earmarked for psychological services, support for families, general services, reconstruction, additional security throughout the community, medical bills for all those involved, as well as counseling and other services that may prove necessary in the future. Squirrel Hill. Squirrel Hill is this amaz- ing neighborhood in the city of Pittsburgh that for more than 100 years has been the center of the Pittsburgh Jewish community. Squirrel Hill is like a combination of the best from West Bloomfield, Birmingham, Huntington Hoods and Oak Park all squished togeth- er. Dozens of synagogues, at least three Jewish day schools, the JCC and other Jewish institutions all can be found in walking distance all over Squirrel Hill. Walking dis- tance from Tree of Life. Tree of Life Congregation also houses two other synagogues: Dor Hadash, a Reconstructionist congregation, and New Light, a Conservative congregation. My cousin Anne Caplan led services at New Light Friday night. My aunt and uncle are co-presidents of New Light. I grew up with the rabbi of Dor Hadash. The educa- tion director of Tree of Life was one of my youth group kids and now a family friend. The murderer entered the Tree of Life building and went from room to room mur- dering people from each of these three congregations — 11 senseless deaths born from hate. Pittsburgh, like Detroit, is a very connected Jewish community. I grieve with the Jewish community of Pittsburgh. This happened in my home. Home, the place where you are supposed to be safe and secure. and Southfield, was in Maryland with her husband when her cell phone started bringing in the news of the violence she never would have expected in the quiet neighborhood that has been her home for 30 years. “People called and texted to find out how we were,” she explained. “Although we don’t belong to the synagogue where the shooting took place, we are a close and cohesive community. Anybody who walks or drives there will see yard signs in different languages that say, ‘No matter where you’re from, you’re welcome here.’” It was Sunday morning when the shock and sadness deepened for the Yoffees as they found out who had died. Irving Younger was another friend known through real estate work. Melvin Wax had been a member of Congregation Beth Shalom, where the Yoffees belong. Yoffee, whose mother, Phyllis Subar, lives in West Bloomfield, felt some irony as an administra- tor at the Community Day School near the synagogue where the kill- ings occurred. Just four days earli- er, students went through a drill to prepare for a dangerous intruder. “As we return home, we are making every effort to be strong as the community comes togeth- er,” Yoffee said. “I know we will be there for each other and stand shoulder to shoulder while trying to eradicate hatred.” Lasday is COO of Detroit’s Jewish Community Center. — Suzanne Chessler, Contributing Writer