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Andrew Exler: Spreading love in the wake of hate

Written by Sarah Connor
Courtesy photos
April 16, 2020

Andrew Exler remembers the day of the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue vividly.聽

His family belongs to the synagogue鈥檚 Tree Of Life*Or L鈥橲imcha congregation, where his parents and grandparents were both married and Exler himself had his Bar Mitzvah. The Squirrel Hill resident recalls the confusion that came the day of the shooting, Oct. 27, 2018.

鈥淚 was sitting at my table in my kitchen and noticed that there were a lot of police sirens, which is very unusual around here. I remember wondering if there was a fire or something,鈥 Exler said. 鈥淭hen I got a text from my dad about what was happening, and then after that group texts started blowing up from everyone. After that, we were just trying to figure out how to comfort everyone.鈥

The rest of the day is a blur for Exler, but one that he cannot forget. Family and friends met at the Squirrel Hill Flower Shop 鈥 a family-owned floral store on Murray Avenue. He huddled close with his family, friends and now-fiancee as they read the names of their neighbors and friends in the news stories listing the deceased. The shooting affected not just Tree of Life, but the two other congregations which share the building 鈥 New Light and Dor Hadash.

The shooting is etched into Exler鈥檚 memory forever. But since then, he has found multiple ways to bring love, compassion and hope to the community. One way to do this is with a tradition he created with some friends and football fans within Pittsburgh鈥檚 Jewish community.

When Exler and his friends started in 2016, it was a lighthearted joke between friends. Menorahgate became an annual event in his friend group. Every year they get together for a Steelers game tailgate falling around Hanukkah season. Exler and his friends light a Menorah during the tailgate to celebrate the December holiday.

Menorahgate started out as an event between seven friends, but it now attracts dozens of members of the community and, in recent years, people from all over the world. Just weeks after the shooting in 2018, Exler and his group of friends decided to take the tradition to a new level and make Menorahgate a fundraising event for Tree of Life.

鈥淭he game [we were planning to tailgate at] wasn鈥檛 鈥檛il mid-December, but we started a Facebook fundraiser at the beginning of November hoping to meet our goal of $1,000,鈥 Exler said. 鈥淲e ended up raising $5,000 within three hours, it was something crazy.鈥

The Menorahgate fundraiser slowly gained traction in the local community and around the country after the initial public takeoff on on Nov. 12, 2018. Soon, celebrities and NFL players were sharing the fundraiser on social media. Before the end of November, Menorahgate had raised $20,000 for Tree of Life, and by the day of the football game, on Dec. 16, 2018, donations peaked at $30,000.

The impact of Exler鈥檚 event inspired him to get more involved with Tree of Life and activism for Pittsburgh鈥檚 Jewish community. Exler, a 2013 alum of Ohio University who received a certificate in accounting from Pitt鈥檚 College of General Studies in 2018, is now 29. He has a youthful look, easily passing for a recent college graduate. It鈥檚 not immediately apparent that he is leading a movement of positive change for an entire community, but those who know him would never second-guess his abilities and his strong love for Pittsburgh鈥檚 Jewish community.

Wu Caiyi | Staff Photographer
Wasi Mohamed (left) and Andrew Exler addressed a small gathering of Pitt students in October as part of a 鈥淪peaking Out Against Hate: How to Combat Hateful Speech and Acts鈥 lecture.

Since leading the large Menorahgate fundraiser, Exler has taken on multiple leadership positions at Tree of Life. He鈥檚 a board member, runs the congregation鈥檚 social media and started a young adult group called the . This was part of Exler鈥檚 goal to get involved with the congregation from a young adult perspective.

鈥淚 sat down with one of the rabbis for lunch to see where we can really help out, because there is such a gap in Jewish synagogue life 鈥 there鈥檚 the much older demographic and then there鈥檚 the demographic of families,鈥 Exler said. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e a young adult and you鈥檙e not married and you don鈥檛 have kids, you might think that there isn鈥檛 a place for you there.鈥

Exler started the Young Jewish Community with a group of community members, including his life-long friend Zachary Schwartz, who grew up at Tree of Life and attended the Emma Kaufmann summer camp of the Jewish Community Center with Exler.

Exler serves as YJC president, while Schwartz is the vice president and treasurer. The pair said the goal of the YJC group is to plan events for the younger members of the Jewish community 鈥 from going out for drinks after synagogue services to attending Pirates games as a group to celebrating Jewish holidays together.

鈥淎fter the shooting, Andrew and I and some other people got together and we decided that we had an obligation to make sure that the future of our synagogue continued,鈥 Schwartz said. 鈥淎t first, we weren鈥檛 sure if [Tree of Life] had a future. So we put together this group.鈥

Schwartz said the group is designed to get millennials who went to the synagogue as kids back into the community, and also to get young Jewish families to come to the synagogue as members in order to regrow numbers and memberships. Between the YJC, his presence on Tree of Life鈥檚 social media and board, Exler is extending his reach beyond just the Squirrel Hill Jewish community.

Exler said he and another young woman on the board 鈥渂ring the median age down鈥 and that the ultimate goal is to eventually get back into the original Tree of Life building on Wilkins Avenue, as at the Rodef Shalom Congregation in Shadyside. Friends of Exler said he is doing an incredible job supporting and uniting the young Jewish community in the City. One of those friends, David Kaplan, is new to Pittsburgh, and Exler鈥檚 work has helped him find his place in the City.

Kaplan, an assignment reporter for WTAE-TV, is originally from Roanoke, Virginia, and moved to Pittsburgh in 2015. He met Exler through a cystic fibrosis fundraising event.

鈥淎ndrew and I just happened to do the fundraiser at the same time that year, and both being Jewish, we just gravitated toward each other, and we became good friends coming out of that,鈥 Kaplan, a Shadyside resident, said.聽

Working in Pittsburgh at the time of the Tree of Life massacre, Kaplan was reporting on the shooting. He went to funerals, spoke to people who knew the deceased and shared that information through TV and the internet. As a Jewish person, reporting on an anti-Semitic hate crime was incredibly difficult for Kaplan, and Exler helped him through it.

鈥淚 was at a few of the funerals that were taking place at Rodef Shalom,鈥 Exler said. 鈥淚 knew some of the victims better than others and [Kaplan] was outside trying to cover the whole thing and he was just a mess. So I brought him inside to sit down with me and calm down, and he really struggled for a while, but he also ended up doing amazing pieces.鈥

Kaplan said experiencing Exler鈥檚 activism first-hand is uplifting and moving.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really incredible to think about his reaction. A lot of people our age would not ultimately come to the conclusion that they want to be a leader after the results of [the shooting],鈥 Kaplan said. 鈥淭hink about understanding all the fallout of that, what to do with the building, what to do with the amazingly generous amounts of money that have come in through donations. Not everyone in our generation would think 鈥業 want to step in and I want to do something.鈥欌

Kaplan recalled that day, not just remembering the shooting, but the sense of community that he felt as a result of it.聽

鈥淚 saw the worst in humanity, but I also saw the best in it,鈥 Kaplan said.

Courtesy of Andrew Exler

Though Exler鈥檚 goal of his work with Tree of Life is to move forward and spread love and community beyond the shooting, he and his family understand the importance of remembering that tragic day. As he and his loved ones barricaded themselves in the Squirrel Hill Flower Shop, bouquet orders for the funerals of the victims began coming in.

The shop is owned by Exler鈥檚 mother and her two sisters and two brothers, and managed by his cousin Katy Levin and one of his aunts. Levin and Exler are very close, as they are the same age. The aftermath of the shooting was heavy, but through the flowers, Levin found a way to spread beauty and light to the community 鈥 something Exler is doing on a large scale now.

鈥淚t felt like I was doing some sort of justice by knowing that the person who decided to do this whole thing wouldn鈥檛 want the [community] coming together like this,鈥 Levin said. 鈥淎nd also, making things that were very pretty was nice. Making something beautiful in such a bad time and making these funerals look nice was really important to me.鈥

And for Exler, the opportunities to strengthen the community are only growing stronger. The easiest way for him to start spreading his message is through Tree of Life鈥檚 , which now have global followings.聽

鈥淲hen this happened, I just started a relationship with the president and rabbi that started with 鈥榃hat can I do?鈥欌 Exler said. 鈥淚 knew I needed to do something.鈥