Jewish leaders oppose death
penalty for Tree of Life shooter
Vigil for victims of synagogue shooting (ANSA) |
The members of the congregations that were targeted in the
worst anti-Semitic attack in US history are asking that the shooter not get the
death penalty, but rather be sentenced to life in prison.
By Francesca Merlo
11 people were killed in the attack on “The Tree of life
Congregation” Synagogue in Pittsburgh in 2018 and the 46 year-old shooter is
now facing the possibility of receiving the death penalty.
Federal prosecutors cite Robert D Bowers’ “lack of remorse”,
after he “targeted men and women participating in Jewish religious worship” .
What form does justice take
The Us Department of Justice claims the attacker’s choice of
Synagogue, situated in one of the largest and oldest urban Jewish populations
in the United States, was made in order to “maximize the devastation, amplify
the harm of his crimes, and instill fear within the local, national and
international Jewish communities”, and that, therefore, “a sentence of death is
justified”.
But not everyone involved believes that killing the killer
would be the best way to serve justice to the three congregations that had
gathered to worship on the morning of October 27th.
Attorney General William Barr, who one month ago announced
the reinstatement of capital punishment for federal prisoners, has received
several letters since the Justice Department announced that it would be
requesting the death penalty for Mr Bowers.
Both religions together
Amongst these is Rabbi Jonathan Perlman, a survivor of the attacks,
who has appealed to Mr Barr’s Catholic Faith by reminding him that “recent
popes and bishops have spoken out against the death penalty”. In his letter, he
described capital punishment as a “cruel form of justice”, stating that both
his religion and that of the shooter have traditions that stand firmly against
the death penalty. He also wrote that “a drawn out and difficult death penalty
trial would be a disaster with witnesses and attorneys dredging up horrifying
drama and giving this killer the media attention he does not deserve.”
Donna Coufal, President of the Dor Hadash congregation,
wrote to Mr Barr to ask that the killer receive a life-sentence rather than the
death penalty, reiterating Rabbi Perlman’s thoughts on a prolonged and painful
trial.
Cruel idea of justice
“It just makes no sense to me,” said Miri Rabinowitz, whose
husband was one of the 11 people killed. For her, killing the man who murdered
her husband would be a “cruel and bitter irony”, as he himself so strongly
opposed the death penalty.
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