Something Was Wrong - S6 E6: Panic Attack City | JE
Episode Date: December 14, 2020Tree of Life Synagogue Inside the Tree of Life Congregation, the Prayer for the Dead Brings Hope by J.E. Reich Follow JE Reich on Twitter and Instagramhttps://www.facebook.com/AntwonRoseFoun...dation/https://www.poisefoundation.org/https://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/news/2020/07/30/poise-foundation-launches-new-fund.html For more info about SWW and to access free mental health resources, please visit SomethingWasWrong.comSupport SWW on Patreon for as little as $1 a monthFollow Tiffany Reese on Instagram Music from Glad Rags’ album Wonder Under See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Thank you so much. Before we get into the second half of J.E.'s story, I asked them to read the article they wrote
about losing 11 loved ones
during the Tree of Life synagogue massacre. The article was published by Vanity Fair on October 29,
2018. A link to their article can also be found in the episode notes.
The first time I went to Tree of Life synagogue this year, it was to say a prayer for the
dead.
It was February, a week after I'd moved back to Pittsburgh from Brooklyn, and my mother
requested that I accompany her to show support.
We were at Temple for the customary morning service, Shachary, and when the time came, we
recited the mourners' kathash, a prayer to memorialize loved ones.
We've lost in honor of my stepfather's father on the anniversary of his death.
My mother picked me up from outside my apartment early in the morning,
and we drove through my old neighborhood, Squirrel Hill, for the five minutes it took to get to the synagogue.
The trip was its own sort of ritual, cataloging the places
of my youth and the memories they contained. Blocks away from the synagogue is the kosher pizza
place I ordered falafel from once a week. The Sarai McPhild Judea Castor were my mother and I
bought my first and only set up to fill in. The alley where my friend's night smoked pot in high school, scattering whenever we
heard cops coming up the street, this is the meaning of home, the reflex of memory. My stepfather,
the executive director of the synagogue, was already there when my mother and I arrived. We were
helping to complete a minion, a gathering of at least 10 worshipers so that the morning service could begin. I
shrouded myself in a prayer shalt and with the skint congregation there in the
early hours of a weekday we began reciting prayers in Hebrew with a fluid
roteness a language made effortless by a collective past. Before the service
began I was given an alia call to receive a blessing in front of the congregation as the Torah portion is read.
My Hebrew name recited as a summons.
I walked down the aisle to the bina, the pulpit, and faced the congregants as the portion was read, chanting in a luting minor key.
This is the place where I saw my stepfather marry my mother, where my
stepbrothers had their brahmitsvas cracking their voices on the trope of their
hofftoras. It is the beehemah in the chapel where eight months later a shooter
carrying an assault rifle would burst through the doors. The members of the
congregation who had arrived early would not
be facing him. Their eyes would be attuned past the place where I stood facing east where
we're told a promised land awaits us. Unlike most Jewish communities in the United States,
the majority of Pittsburgh's Jewish population lives within the city limits, creating a
a shuttle-like atmosphere that our Jewish European ancestors would find more
familiar than not. According to a recent study conducted by researchers from
Brandeis University, 26% of an estimated 49,200 Jews in the Greater Pittsburgh
area reside in the traditionally Jewish neighborhood of
Squirrel Hill with an additional 31% claiming other urban neighborhoods as home.
While the same study traced a significant drop in membership rates for local synagogues,
a substantial portion of Pittsburgh's Jewish population came of age within the hallowed
halls of one of the city's many temples.
These places are more than just houses of worship.
There are where children run freely through the halls in between Hebrew school classes,
rattling around in unoccupied rooms with curiosity and rebellion, where teenagers slow dance
at Bar Mitzvah parties, hoping for their first kisses, where adults beat
their fists against their breastbones in a tonement for their trespasses during Umkippur.
It's where my stepfather blows a resounding, primal note on a show far at the conclusion
of every Rochishana service to usher in a new year. To say, everyone knows everyone is
hardly an exaggeration, it's a given. In the days following the shooting of Atri of Life
during a morning Shabbat service on October 27th, the fact that we all know each other
lends itself a complex and cruel terror. After my partner tells me about the shooting as
an ironing effort after my mother texts to assure me that she and my stepfather were not in
synagogue but day after my youngest sister and I sobbed together on the phone. The terrible
the terrible, wondering begins. Michael, the immediate past president of the synagogue is the father of my first childhood
friend.
Ogy, Tree of Life's maintenance man, used to come over to our house for dinner on Thursday
nights.
Cecil, a congregant with fragile ex- syndrome who calls my stepfather his BFF visits him every day
and confides in him his fears of death.
He calls from friends and family, panic, straining our voices to find out who was where.
As the news reports, a rising death toll, first eight, then ten, then eleven, there is
one undeniable fact.
No matter who the victims are, they will be people we know by father, the son of Holocaust
survivors, believes this horrible fact on the phone that the shooter targeted us because
we are Jews and because we were together.
The day after the shooting, I went to a vigil hosted by a local chapter of If Not Now,
an activist group I belong to.
The organizers made sure to state with blunt candor that anti-Semitism is an interlocking
symptom of white supremacy, of xenophobia, of a particularly American kind of racist
rot.
The rain did not deter the candles the crowd holds, flames cradled in our palms.
More cops and shools will not make us safer, when Speaker said.
Building a wall will not make us safer.
Silence will not make us safer. Silence will not make us safer. After each
sentence the crowd agreed. I thought of certain headlines I've read, certain
declarations, blaming the massacre on the unlocked doors of the synagogue,
rather than the shooter or the 21 guns registered to his name. I thought of the synagogue, rather than the shooter, or the 21 guns registered to his name.
I thought of the president who blamed the victims by suggesting an armed guard could
have saved them," the crowd sang, joining hands, gripping each other, holding each other
up, miles away.
My stepfather was crowed up in his bed, inconsolable, remembering what
Ogi told him as he fled from the building. How he saw Cecil Rosenthal, a giant of a man,
just laying in blood, how he died alongside his brother David. Another speaker at the vigil, a non-binary trans person.
Remember, Dr. Jerry Rubinowitz, who made sure to learn.
Their proper pronouns, after they began transitioning
with the same compassion he showed each of his patients.
Daniel Stahine, another victim,
was their benamus, Fetutor,
a few of us knew the grandson of Rose
Malinger, who was gunned down while attending services with her daughter. She was 97 years old.
As the potential continued, the media reported more details about the shooter.
Who eat your march true of life. Because of the synagogue's ties to Hias, a Jewish nonprofit organization that provides aid
to immigrants and refugees, one New York Times article quoted friends and neighbors who
described him as a man in his own little world.
A loner who built pipe bombs for fun as a teenager, a ghost.
He plume choose for helping migrant caravans, the same caravans, present
Donald Trump has incorrectly alleged or filled with gang members and criminals.
But for now, here we were, this growing crowd of grievers. Once again, we recited a prayer for the dead, our voices in unison.
I've heard many people say, how words cannot express their pain.
But in this moment, I find that these ancient words bring hope.
Here we are in the Pittsburgh, a people, and a people who will continue to be.
No matter what may come.
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The day after the shooting, I was at my apartment
and somebody who I had grown, like,
who had been a neighbor of mine when I was much younger,
who is a journalist and works for a con day nest.
Saw my Twitter feed and the things that I had been
tweeting both about my own personal feelings about the
shooting and just sort of like the snippets of news from
the ground. And she reached out to me and asked if I would be
willing to write a personal essay about my experience
regarding the shooting. It was a difficult decision for me to make just because I
sort of weighing between
how something like this could
sharing my experiences could possibly
serve a great or good and helping other people, but I was also incredibly worried that it would seem like I was
sort of cashing in on a tragedy.
Like, I was worried about exploiting it in some way, which is obviously something that I
wouldn't would never do and I didn't want to do.
So I did talk about it with my partner at the time and I talked about it, I think I talked
about it with my mom and I came to the conclusion that yeah, it was something that I should do
because it could help people in the long run and maybe it could put into words
things that other people couldn't at the time. I wrote up in essay and I want to
like less than 24 hours I turned it around pretty much immediately. I kind of
just sent it in and I was like I kind of didn't even want to look at it because
I just felt emotionally exhausted. It forced me to really start processing things
in a way that I hadn't been able to before
because I was just in complete shock.
I didn't even know it had been published
until people started sending me the link.
I remember like my Facebook blew up
because I went to high school with,
like both Jewish and non-Jewish who I hadn't spoken to
in a really long time were like sending me,
were like posting it on their walls and like sending me personal messages about like how much
it meant to them and how much their feelings about the shooting as well, which it took me a while to
be able to like really start responding to people just because everything was just so much at once
that I couldn't really take it. I just needed to kind of sort through and start to process my grief. But it did ultimately, I think it did what I wanted it to,
which is to help people find the words that were within them. I wasn't seeing it there at the
time. I was seeing a psychiatrist, but I was able to luckily have a session with them a few,
like a few days after the shooting to be able to start processing it.
But writing was really my rock in terms of understanding my feelings and understanding how to unpack my grief.
So it was actually a number of months later, I remember it was actually around Valentine's Day.
My partner and I were preparing for Valentine's Day.
And I got a call from my mother.
She asked if I had made anybody mad lately,
which of course, like coming from my mother,
I'm like a weird question.
I've been a professional, writing professionally
for gosh, for over a decade,
and being somebody who is
queer, who's Jewish and who's trans so like not like a cis white dude,
a cis straight right white dude and like writing things in public and things that are on the on the internet
like I've made a lot of people angry in my time. I've developed a pretty thick skin when it comes to
not just criticism but like receiving things like
DMs that are like death threats or like
Antisemitic cartoons in my email box
Which usually just kind of makes me laugh because it's somebody wasted two hours of their life drawing an anti-Semitic cartoon of me to send to me
Only to sort of like reify the fact that whoever I think this person who's
doing it is a total loser and pathetic and not somebody I'd never be scared of.
So like I've gotten used to that kind of stuff.
And because like the medium that those kinds of things have been sent to me or said to
me have always been through the internet. Like my mom calling and saying,
is somebody angry at you?
Did you make someone mad?
Like it didn't click.
And I was like, mom, what do you mean?
No, I don't think so.
And she told me that somebody had left a message
on my stepdad's cell phone calling me by my first name.
I go by J.E. Reich professionally because I like to sort of split my private life and
my professional life.
And they didn't refer to me as J.E. Reich.
They referred to me by my first name.
So I again didn't think this had anything to do with anything writing related.
For that message that I remember that one was little muddled. We could only like really hear my name and then calling me okay but
most of it seemed like pretty garbled and the voice wasn't a voice that I
recognized at all. It was it was slightly weird I mean it's not very it doesn't
feel very great to be called like the K word. It doesn't feel great to be called anything derogatory.
But like, it just seems sort of like weird, jumbled up nonsense.
My mom then proceeded to tell me that my stepdad had been receiving phone calls from this
number.
It was an unknown number that were taunting him and saying things about the tree of life shooting, calling him
derogatory names, and only then did it start to dawn on me. Yeah. And of course my step-dad
is kind of like a very stoic guy, and I don't think at the beginning he really like understood
the severity of this, especially because they had his personal cell phone number. It took us a little while, but we did figure out how that person got the personal cell phone number.
So my stepdad, he left Tree of Life in June of 2018, and they decided not to hire somebody else
for his role at that time. So his office, I guess, was still empty and he still had his voicemail recording on it.
So, later that day, the person called again and my mom said,
, Joel, don't pick it up. Let it go.
Straight to voicemail, which my stepdad did.
And that was when that was the second message that was recorded.
And that one was addressed again to me by my first name, again calling me Kike.
They said some homophobic things in the message too.
A lot of it just kind of, it was very odd.
Some of it was just yelling out words.
And one of them was like, I'm gonna take a buck shot to you.
Something happened to do with basically shooting me.
This is like when it sort of,
like the ramifications of it really hit home especially because they knew my first name. So after speaking
with my mother about these threats and sort of realizing the alarming nature
of them, we both decided to call the police. We both lived in different jurisdictions, so two
different precincts dealt with these calls respectively. I mean they did take
it really seriously. I will have to say that while I have a lot of very complicated
feelings about the police as a whole, the specific police officer that I dealt with initially was really wonderful,
very caring, and he made sure to gender me correctly.
He even gave me a hug, which was again, like, very disconcerting, considering my larger
general feelings about the police as a whole in the United States. And yeah, they took it seriously.
For the first, at least the first couple of days,
maybe slightly under a week there,
was actually a police car parked outside for 24 hours.
Maybe there was, I don't know, like maybe 10 minute breaks,
or where there was no police car car just because switching shifts and whatnot.
And after that, for at least two weeks there was a specific increase in a police presence
within at most of four block radius from my house. I mean it's a residential area and they were specifically there to make sure that no one
was, you know, driving by my house or, you know, they were on the lookout for anybody
who might fit the description, whatever that might mean, of a white supremacist or a white
nationalist and who seemed to have maybe a particular interest in my address. As far as I know, there was maybe only one instance where they
noted a car that didn't seem to belong to anybody who lived in the area
that drove by my house a few times, but I think they ultimately
figured out very quickly that it was probably just somebody who was lost in
the neighborhood. It wasn't a threat of any kind.
The calls didn't stop. They, I mean, the case was immediately sort of like sent up to Allegheny PD, which is like the county PD as well as the FBI.
There was sort of like an FBI liaison that we contacted whenever we got another call.
that we contacted whenever we got another call. And we did get these calls, I think only stopped a few months ago.
But yeah, for at least a period of six months, maybe eight months,
we received calls like this.
So sometimes it was once a week, sometimes it was like once every six weeks.
At one point, I was alerted by someone online to a thread on H-chan about me. I don't know if it was
connected to the calls or not, but basically the commenters on this forum were just like discussing
how I needed to be raped real good. They referred to me by she-her pronouns and you know called me
the K-word, called me a number of really derogatory things.
And I had to screenshot that all and give it to the officer who was working on the case,
or the detective who was working on the case, and sent him each message.
And also, I had to basically read them aloud to him because he was sort of an older guy.
And he didn't really understand internet stuff.
So it was kind of retraumatizing in its own right.
The calls did eventually stop.
I have theories as to who might have been behind it,
but it's pure speculation at best
and I don't think it would be responsible for me
to pontificate who I was behind the calls
or the people who I think was behind the calls.
We did find out that the number that they were using was basically sort of like a rerouted
number, so we couldn't even find the location of the collar.
The collar could have been anywhere and it was scary to think the collar would have possibly
been in Pittsburgh as well.
That's so terrifying.
Like how do you summarize what that experience felt like to be continually receiving this
harassment not only for yourself but for your parents?
I mean, it was really debilitating, at least for like the first few weeks.
I didn't want to go outside.
I hardly ever went outside.
I was pretty terrified.
I did have like some friends who were really awesome and came over and checked
in with me to make sure I was okay. But every little noise outside the door had me on
guard. It was panic attack city. I was also working at the time too. I was working from
home doing some remote reporting. This was like a contract position. So it was already going to be like a temporary gig.
But I had to explain to my editor,
like, so I might need to end my shift early
because the police might be coming by
to follow up on the report involving death threats
I've been getting for a shooting that occurred
in my city, you know, months ago.
It was like, I sounded like I sounded like a crazy person just trying to explain
it to them.
Yeah, I just couldn't.
It was so surreal.
Yeah, it's, it was.
And I was like, these people must think I'm a lunatic because like who, who, like, what,
how do you find yourself in this kind of situation?
You know, I just, I just like would try to throw myself into work when I had shifts.
So I could just focus on
anything but that. But it was just a series of panic attacks one after the other. But a few weeks
later, or maybe a month later, another close friend of mine from college, Timmy, he died.
So within this like months long span, my friend just dies, then the shooting happens, then my friend
Timmy dies. And so it was sort and so it hit me all over again.
Unfortunately, at the time, I didn't have resources to help care that I needed in terms of my mental health.
So I was really just trying to try to hold it together as much as I possibly could, but it really wrecked me for a really long time.
I've issues with alcohol dependency,
so for a brief time I started drinking again, pretty badly. And I mean, all these things
also were part of the reason why my relationship at the time ended. All these stressors. And
I can't blame them for that as a factor because it's a lot for somebody to take. I was
trying to figure out how to cope, and I like I was trying to actually like get a therapist, but like you know at the time I was on like a really long wait list
and there was very little I can could do. I didn't have insurance so it was only months later when I
started to go back into therapy when I had access to it and I had access to that care that I started
being able to heal. You are such a strong person.
I mean, when I think about how much you had coming at you
at once, it's an incredible amount of trauma and grief.
It's horrific.
I imagine you're still healing.
I think so.
Yeah.
I do think about this a lot because the idea of normal and okay, because in a way, I
think it's possible to heal without ever being okay.
I think it's possible to heal and knowing that something inside you did break for a while
and that thing still exists and it always will, but that doesn't mean that you have to
sort of let it tear you from the inside out.
I don't think of myself as a very strong person.
I just think of myself as a person who has figured out
how to survive and maybe one day I'll think about it
differently, but I think it's okay for now.
And I think the only thing that I can really do
is just look forward and hope that some of the experiences
that I've had and talking about them can in some way
shape or form help others.
Absolutely.
I think I took any anger or rage I had about the shooting and tried to channel it into supporting other minority communities in this country, of my fellow neighbors who deserve to be heard just as much as I did,
and making sure that people know the name Antoine was the second,
and that he was murdered, he died in unfair death,
and that stories like those should be represented,
just like stories like mine.
The shooter is nothing to me.
I don't own him my forgiveness.
Instead, I owe others all I shit and love. I think that's a beautiful approach to take.
We have so much more work to do. I mean, just the political climate in Pittsburgh, especially
leading up to the election and the Black Lives Matter protests that have taken place in the city and the way
in which Trump supporters have enacted violence against those protesters and who have like done
their best to wield this silly stupid idiotic notion that whiteness equals supremacy in any way,
shape or form. I couldn't step foot into any synagogue
for a really long time.
It's still really hard for me to do it.
And of course, right now with COVID,
I kind of wish that I had been able to do it more
because I haven't been able to set foot inside one
since the pandemic began.
But for the following year, on Yom Kippur,
Tree of Life did hold services
actually in a church.
A cavalry church was nice enough
to lend the space to Tree of Life congregate,
so we would be able to come together for the high holidays
and really be together for the first time in such a large way,
intoning the words our people have spoken for thousands of years all in one
space.
And my girlfriend Zoe came with me to that.
It was nearly a year after the shooting had happened.
And I stayed the whole time.
And I was able to see people I loved and be with someone I loved and be with my community
in this way for the first time in a really long
time.
And it's the closest thing I've ever felt to what it means to truly start to heal.
And I think healing is building up to those moments, making it possible for those moments
to happen, whether it's through activism, whether it's through social justice, or whether
it's through, you know, taking one step inside of a doorway. I don't think it's linear,
and I think sometimes it can feel like, you know, it's a losing game, but I think it can happen.
I thought we could end by sharing the 11 victims' names. Yeah.
Joyce Feinberg, 75. Richard Gottfried, 65. Rose Mallinger, thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video.
Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing this video. Thank you so much for sharing and for being on the show.
I really appreciate it.
Thank you for letting me be sure to share my story.
Thank you.
Thank you again to J.E. for sharing their story with all of us.
For more information about Antoine Rose II, please check out the episode notes.
Thank you so much and stay safe friends.
Something was wrong is produced and hosted by me, Tiffany Rees. Music on this episode
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Thank you so much for listening. I'm not a telly, I'm not around
I hang out at the bottom, I know that it's not the fun
It comes, the thing to know me, it don't know me well You're a little better, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me, you don't know me well
Thinkin' of me, you don't know me well I'm a little bit more I'm a little bit more
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I'm a little bit more
I'm a little bit more
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