Categories: U.S.

Demolition begins at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue site

close Video

Fox News Flash top headlines for January 17

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what’s clicking on Foxnews.com.

Demolition got underway Wednesday at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, the site of the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history, as part of the effort to reimagine the building to honor the 11 people who were killed there in 2018.

The demolition work began slowly, with crews picking away at the building’s exterior.

Most of the building will be removed, although portions of the sanctuary walls will be preserved. The new building will include spaces for worship, a museum, an education center and a movie theater.

PITTSBURGH SYNAGOGUE SHOOTER ROBERT BOWERS TO BE SENTENCED TO DEATH, JURY DECIDES

Carole Zawatsky, who heads the new nonprofit overseeing the project, was at the site as demolition began. She said she had a mix of emotions, including feeling bittersweet knowing why the old building was being demolished but also feeling tremendous excitement about seeing the project moving forward. It was sobering and a physical manifestation of healing, she said.

“It is an incredible symbol of great resilience and moving forward,” she said.

A makeshift memorial sits outside the Tree of Life Synagogue, the target of a mass shooting that left 11 people dead, in Pittsburgh, Oct. 29, 2018. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

The Oct. 27, 2018, attack claimed the lives of 11 worshippers from three congregations meeting at the synagogue – Dor Hadash, New Light and Tree of Life. The three have been meeting at nearby synagogues since then.

In a related project, a memorial to the victims is being planned for a site just outside the synagogue.

The process of planning that memorial was left to representatives of the congregations and victims’ families.

The design calls for a walkway that will lead visitors into garden memorial with 11 sculpted forms of open books, each representing one of the people who were killed.

They represent the “Book of Life,” where, according to Jewish tradition, the righteous are named.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The man who killed the congregants was sentenced to death last year, after the conclusion of a long-delayed federal trial.

Share

Recent Posts

What Trump’s ‘ratepayer protection pledge’ means for you

When you open a chatbot, stream a show or back up photos to the cloud,…

5 hours ago

Google dismantles 9M-device Android hijack network

Free apps are supposed to cost you nothing but storage space. But in this case,…

10 hours ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Trump forces Big Tech to pay for AI power

IN TODAY'S NEWSLETTER: - Trump brings Big Tech to White House to curb power costs…

11 hours ago

Amazon shelves Blue Jay warehouse robot

Amazon made a lot of noise last October when it unveiled Blue Jay, a multi-armed…

1 day ago

300,000 Chrome users hit by fake AI extensions

Your web browser may feel like a safe place, especially when you install helpful tools…

2 days ago

Think your New Year’s privacy reset worked? Think again

At the start of the year, you did everything right. You searched your name, opted…

2 days ago