Biden also said, in a halting comment, that he had visited Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue, the site of a 2018 shooting massacre
in which 11 people were murdered.
“I used to think that hate could be defeated, it could be wiped out. But I learned a long time ago, it can’t. It only hides. It hides. It hides under the rocks. And given any oxygen at all, it comes out. It’s a minority view, but it comes out, and it comes out raging. And it’s been given too much oxygen in the last four, five, seven, 10 years, and it has seen itself, whether it was — I remember spending time at the — you know, going to the — you know, the Tree of Life Synagogue, speaking with the — just –,” Biden
said; he didn’t finish the sentence, instead continuing, “It just is amazing these things are happening — happening in America.”
But the synagogue’s executive director, Barb Feige,
told the New York Post on Thursday that Biden did not actually visit.
Myers said in a statement to CNN on Friday: “President Biden kindly called me on my cell phone as I was sitting in Dulles Airport awaiting a return flight to Pittsburgh after I testified before Congress in July 2019. In a heartfelt way, he extended his condolences and asked how we were doing. We spoke about the challenges of antisemitism, and he made clear he would confront it with us as president. The conversation meant a great deal to me, and I will always be grateful for his kind words and continued support of our community.”
Nonetheless: Biden told Jewish leaders, and the members of the public who watched the event, that he had actually gone to the synagogue and spent time there. A phone call is not the same thing. And if he had meant to correct his talk of “spending time at” and “going to” the synagogue by adding the part about “speaking with” someone, he could have made that clear.
Then-President Donald Trump
visited Tree of Life in October 2018, the month of the massacre.
Source link