Poway Chabad rabbi: ‘Fight darkness with light,’ urges Moment of Silence in schools

May 3, 2019 by JNS
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The founding rabbi of Chabad of Poway in Southern California spoke at the White House on Thursday, less than a week after his synagogue was attacked, with one woman killed and three others injured.

Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein of Chabad of Poway in Southern California speaks in the White House Rose Garden on May 2, 2019, less than a week after his synagogue was attacked by a lone gunman who killed one woman and injured three. Photo by Jake Turx/Ami Magazine.

Chabad Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein talked about facing the shooter, 19-year-old John Earnest, even if he got killed.

He said that the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson, taught to fight darkness with light.

“It was that moment that I made a decision: No matter what happens to me, I’m going to save as many people as possible,” said Goldstein in the Rose Garden with U.S. President Donald Trump standing behind him.

“I should’ve been dead by now, based on the rule of statistics,” he said, considering the bullet fire that injured his hands and caused the loss of his right index finger.

“But I did not stop. The Rebbe taught me: As a Jew, you are a soldier of God. You need to stand tall and fast, and do whatever it takes to change the world,” said Goldstein. “My life has changed forever, but it changed so I can make change.”

 

How the nation can overcome the tragedy, according to the rabbi, was to “introduce a moment of silence in all public schools so that children from early childhood on could recognize that there’s more good to the world. That they are valuable. That there is accountability, and every human being is created in God’s image.”

Goldstein remarked it was advice that the Rebbe gave to his followers after U.S. President Ronald Reagan was shot in 1981.

Lori Gilbert-Kaye, 60, was killed in the attack. Almog Peretz, 34, and Noya Dahan, 8, sustained wounds and shrapnel.

Prosecutors are seeking a sentence of life without parole or the death penalty for Earnest, despite California’s moratorium on capital punishment.

“The evidence indicated that the defendant fired eight to 10 rounds before the rifle appeared to jam or malfunction, and the defendant was unable to clear the weapon,” said San Diego County Deputy District Attorney Leonard Trinh in court.

An off-duty Border Patrol agent who was in the synagogue, which is located about a half-hour outside of San Diego, fired at Earnest, hitting his car. The gunman fled the scene, but was soon apprehended without incident after he called 911 to admit to committing the crime, in addition to providing his location.

San Diego County Sheriff Bill Gore said Earnest was armed with an “AR-type assault weapon,” and added that he was being interviewed by the FBI and detectives.

The attack occurred exactly six months to the day after the deadliest shooting in American Jewish history, when a gunman killed 11 worshippers at the Tree of Life*Or L’Simcha Synagogue in Pittsburgh.

JNS

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