Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Tributes Pour In For California Synagogue Shooting Victim Who Died Protecting Her Rabbi

Tributes Pour In For California Synagogue Shooting Victim Who Died Protecting Her Rabbi
Dov Lipman/Facebook

Lori Gilbert Kaye, 60, was murdered when a 19-year-old gunman opened fire at a synagogue in Poway near San Diego, California.

Kaye was shot at close range on Shabbat – the last day of Passover – while attempting to save Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, 57, who sustained defensive wounds to his hand.


According to Buzzfeed News, Goldstein told Roneet Lev, a synagogue member and Kaye's longtime friend, that the martyr saved his life.

Goldstein, who sustained gunshot wounds to two fingers and is likely to lose one of them, told CNN's Brian Stelter on Sunday:

"In my own interpretation, Lori took the bullet for all of us. She died to protect all of us."

Kaye's close friend Audrey Jacobs celebrated her in a Facebook post, calling Kaye "a jewel of our community, a true eshet chayil – a woman of valor."

"You were always running to do a mitzvah (good deed) and gave tzedaka (charity) to everyone," said Jacobs.

Kaye attended the synagogue on Saturday to recite Yizkor, a memorial prayer for deceased relatives, for her mother who died in November.

Kaye's husband is a doctor and rushed to the scene to perform CPR after hearing about the shooting. According to Jacob's, he fainted after hearing that his wife was among the victims.

Tributes began pouring in for Kaye, who is being hailed as a hero.




Los Angeles-based non-profit group, Stand With Us, offered their sympathies.




The shooting was a deliberate attack on the Jewish community.





After Goldstein was released from the hospital after his surgery on Sunday, he told the Today Show about his 30-year friendship with Kaye.

"I started this congregation 35 years ago from the ground up...Lori was the one who helped me secure a construction loan. And she's been a steadfast member, supporter, and philanthropist. Just a kind soul. Everyone in the community knew her."

He added that the Jewish community will refuse to be intimidated by antisemitism.

"I guarantee you, we will not be intimidated or deterred by this terror. Terror will not win. As Americans, we can't cower in the face of this senseless hate that is antisemitism."

Noya Dahan, 8, and her uncle, Almog Peretz, 34, survived their injuries from the shooting and were released from the hospital.

Peretz also helped save lives that day. He helped usher the children out through the exit and sustained shots to his leg, according to a witness.


"He grabbed all the kids in his hands and was just running towards the exit (when) he saw another kid over there," a witness told Fox 5.

"He grabbed him and started running and (that's when) the shooter shot him in the leg. He didn't care. He kept on running with the kids and just ran out."

Kaye died from her injuries shortly after the shooting and leaves behind a loving husband and a 22-year-old daughter.

A vigil at Rancho Bernardo Community Presbyterian Church brought together people of many faiths in solidarity to pay their respects for Kaye and the other victims.

More from

Joe Pesci; Donald Trump
PBS; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Resurfaced Clips From 'Sesame Street' Shed Light On Why Trump Hates PBS So Much

Friends, family, and professional associates of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump have all called out a serious lack of emotional maturity in the 78-year-old.

They've highlighted multiple instances of the former reality show host harming his own self interests for the sake of petty revenge against anyone or anything that bruises his fragile ego.

Keep Reading Show less
Elmo
Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Headspace

Fake LinkedIn Post From 'Elmo' About Getting Laid Off From 'Sesame Street' Goes Viral—And It's Brutal

One of the Trump Administration's most recent rounds of budget-slashing was aimed squarely at NPR and PBS, the latter of which gave us one of American culture's most iconic institutions: Sesame Street.

The show's future now of course hangs in the balance, and one of its most beloved characters, Elmo, is calling it a layoff.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from video of Ken Turner, the tank, and the Tesla
Led By Donkeys

98-Year-Old WWII Vet Uses Tank To 'Crush Fascism' By Literally Crushing A Tesla In Viral Video

98-year-old British World War II veteran Ken Turner has gone viral after using a Sherman tank to crush a Tesla vehicle in an act of protest against Elon Musk and the rise of fascism around the globe.

Turner, a former Royal Engineer, crushed a Tesla electric vehicle bearing the license plate “FASCISM” in a bold protest organized by the activist group Led by Donkeys. The car, donated by a Tesla owner who said they were “appalled” by Musk’s embrace of far-right politics in Europe, was used in the dramatic stunt to symbolize resistance to rising authoritarianism.

Keep Reading Show less
Marjorie Taylor Greene
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

MTG Just Made 'Weirdos' Jab At Dems—And Critics Turned It Right Back Around On Her

Georgia Republican Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene found herself on the receiving end of her own attack after social media users flipped the script following Greene's criticism of Democratic Representative Melanie Stansbury during a hearing about transgender athletes.

On Wednesday, Greene chaired a hearing aimed at spotlighting the stories of two activists who say they were negatively affected by the inclusion of transgender athletes in their sports leagues.

Keep Reading Show less
Messy paint and palette set
Photo by Steve Johnson on Unsplash

Hobbies People Picked Up As Adults That Made Them Unexpectedly Happy

Everyone needs something to do in their lives that's purely for joy, not for fame or work or money. It's a relaxing and enjoyable escape and can be a key part of someone's personality and lifestyle.

But sometimes, a new hobby will come in unexpectedly, when we didn't even think anything would come of it.

Keep Reading Show less