Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Jewish group starts project to plant ‘Trees of Life’ in honor of synagogue victims

“Join us in planting 12,000 trees of life [in Israel]! Make the land even more beautiful in their memory,” it said on the project’s event page.

Clementine trees at a field in Moshav Nahalal in the Jezreel Valley, on March 26, 2019. Photo by Anat Hermony/Flash90
Clementine trees at a field in Moshav Nahalal in the Jezreel Valley, on March 26, 2019. Photo by Anat Hermony/Flash90

The Jewish organization United With Israel is inviting people to sponsor the planting of more than 20 different fruit trees in Israel in memory of the 12 victims of the synagogue shootings in Pittsburgh and Poway, Calif.

“Join us in planting 12,000 trees of life! Make the land even more beautiful in their memory,” it said on the project’s event page.

“[This is] a great opportunity to help Israeli farmers while paying tribute to the 12 holy victims of synagogue shootings, may their memories be for a blessing,” continued the plea. “Show your love for Israel by joining in this wonderful mitzvah!”

A total of 11 Jewish worshippers were murdered on Oct. 27, 2018, when a lone gunman entered the Tree of Life*Or L’Simcha Synagogue in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh during Shabbat-morning services.

Exactly six months later, on April 27, 2019, a similar shooting took place at Chabad of Poway in Southern California, where a 60-year-old Jewish woman was killed in the synagogue lobby and three others injured in the attack, also on Shabbat morning during services.

“I just can’t think of a better example of how Israel is not an apartheid state when you look at the people who are actually making our products,” Rachel Simons, whose products are now banned at the Park Slope Coop, told JNS.
U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres’s decision is “a moral disgrace that proves that Guterres has lost all credibility,” Danny Danon said.
“You can’t call yourself independent when you’re being funded specifically by a government,” Hillel Neuer of UN Watch told JNS.
David Bocarsly, of Jewish California, stated that the vote was a “powerful statement that California stands with every person of faith and their constitutional right to worship.”
“No one’s pain is greater or more important than others,” Gov. Josh Shapiro told Politico. “But from a data perspective, there has been a dramatic spike in antisemitism that is unmatched elsewhere, and that’s a problem.”
“The Iranian military’s latest attempt to extort global maritime trade is proof that Economic Fury has left the regime desperate for cash,” the U.S. treasury secretary stated.