The fence in front of the Tree of Life synagogue has been decorated with 101 images from young people around the country and in New Zealand. It has been installed nearly one year after a mass shooting took place in the building.
Kathleen J. Davis was born and raised in the great state of Michigan in a city just north of Detroit. She graduated from the University of Michigan in 2017 with a degree in political science.
As General Assignment Reporter, Kathleen covers a little bit of everything. She also contributes to the Pittsburgh Tech Report and Good Question! series.
Kathleen Davis / WESA
The fence in front of the Tree of Life synagogue has been decorated with 101 images from young people around the country and in New Zealand. It has been installed nearly one year after a mass shooting took place in the building.
(Pittsburgh) — A collaborative art project in front of the Tree of Life synagogue site in Squirrel Hill has been installed. #HeartsTogether: The Art of Rebuilding, includes 101 images printed on a windscreen that stretches in front of the building along Wilkins Avenue.
More than 230 submissions were received, all from kids and young adults. The theme is uplifting images: many feature holding hands and depictions of diversity.
The images came from 11 U.S. states and New Zealand, with a number of them from high schools and cities that have experienced mass shootings, including Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. and Columbine High School in Littleton, Col. Submissions from Parkland, Fla. make up about a third of the images.
Tree of Life board member Laurie Zittrain Eisenberg said it’s meaningful that young people from these places participated.
Matt Rourke / AP Photo
Stars of David with the names of those killed in a deadly shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue stand in front of the synagogue in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2018.
“The fact that they could envision hope and light after what they went through gives us hope as well,” Eisenberg said.
Tree of Life Rabbi Jeffrey Meyers said the Synagogue community has drawn strength from the submissions.
“This collection could be an uplift not just to our neighbors, and not just to Pittsburgh, but really to the world that there is far more good in the world than there is evil,” Meyers said. “In the end, good will always triumph.”
The art project will be up until the fence in front of the synagogue comes down, which Eisenberg said could take years.
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