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Thousands Attend Solidarity Shabbat in Naples

Rachel Iacovone
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WGCU
Not a seat is left unfilled at Temple Shalom's solidarity service on Friday, Nov. 2.

Synagogues across the country opened their doors for solidarity services over the weekend, including one in Naples.

As the sun slipped past the horizon, so began the first Sabbath since the mass shooting at Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.

“Here at Temple Shalom, in recent days, we’ve received notes and flowers from the broader community," Rabbi Adam Miller said. "More than one person offered to gather their friends together to stand around our building so that anybody who entered would feel safe knowing that they are protected and not alone.”

Miller spoke to the crowd of more than 1,500 people of all faiths, while, in an adjoining room, hundreds more watched on a big screen. And, that’s not counting all of Temple Shalom’s live stream viewers Friday night.

Credit Rachel Iacovone / WGCU
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WGCU
The crowd listens, as Rabbi Adam Miller introduces the next guest speaker.

Many parishioners stood for the nearly three-hour service in the limited space, as rabbi after pastor after imam spoke about their shared God’s beliefs about hatred and, more importantly, about healing.

But, when Temple Shalom’s executive director Deborah Fidel took the stage, her words were not from God or from herself. She, instead, read her youngest son’s college application essay, which he wrote back home in Squirrel Hill just days after the shooting.

“The place where my brother become a bar mitzvah is now a crime scene," Fidel read. "The place where we asked God on Yom Kippur to be written and sealed in the book of life is filled with the stench of death.”

Josh, a senior in high school, writes that he first became aware of the threat of pervasive gun violence, after the shooting in Parkland. By the end of his essay though, he comes around to the point that the healing is also universal in such tragedies.

“On the same day that violence defiled a once sacred space, 2,000 people showed up on a cold, rainy night. I saw people of all races, ethnicities and backgrounds with their arms around one another, voices lifted and song and prayer. Even on such a terrible day, I was reminded that there are many more good people than bad.”

Credit Rachel Iacovone / WGCU
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WGCU
Rabbi Adam Miller addresses the crowd of more than 1,500 in the seated area at Temple Shalom's solidarity service on Friday, Nov. 2.

Rabbi Miller had a similar message to share after the Shabbat service.

“God-willing, we’ll be gathering this community, not for a moment of solidarity around something tragic that’s happened but for a moment of celebration together for accomplishing and building together the community that we all want to live in.”

As the service ended, those in the crowd wrapped their arms around their loved ones and swayed along to John Lennon’s “Imagine.”

Credit Rachel Iacovone / WGCU
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WGCU
Three women hold onto each other and sway along to John Lennon's "Imagine," as the solidarity service concludes.

Rachel Iacovone is a reporter and associate producer of Gulf Coast Live for WGCU News. Rachel came to WGCU as an intern in 2016, during the presidential race. She went on to cover Florida Gulf Coast University students at President Donald Trump's inauguration on Capitol Hill and Southwest Floridians in attendance at the following day's Women's March on Washington.Rachel was first contacted by WGCU when she was managing editor of FGCU's student-run media group, Eagle News. She helped take Eagle News from a weekly newspaper to a daily online publication with TV and radio branches within two years, winning the 2016 Society of Professional Journalists Mark of Excellence Award for Best Use of Multimedia in a cross-platform series she led for National Coming Out Day. She also won the Mark of Excellence Award for Feature Writing for her five-month coverage of an FGCU student's transition from male to female.As a WGCU reporter, she produced the first radio story in WGCU's Curious Gulf Coast project, which answered the question: Does SWFL Have More Cases of Pediatric Cancer?Rachel graduated from Florida Gulf Coast University with a bachelor's degree in journalism.