Itâs a quiet, upper-middle-class suburb just east of the Evergladesâa place where people reside for its quality of life: picturesque homes abutting wetlands, superior schools and tree-lined streets. On Sundays, moms and dads cheer their kids on at little league games. Everybody knows everybody in Parkland, Fla.
So when tragedy struck, it hit everyone.
On Feb. 14, 2018, a lone teenage gunman murdered 17 peopleâ14 students and three adultsâat Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Five of the victims were Jewish, and an area-wide shiva was held for the fallen. âIn the days following the shooting, I visited at each of the 17 homes that had lost a loved one,â said Rabbi Shuey Biston, outreach director at Chabad of Parkland. âIf there was a student I didnât know, I knew his or her friend, or neighbor or soccer coach.â
âIn times of tragedy, people unite,â he said. âThat certainly happened here. It brought us even closer together.â
In the weeks and months following the mass shooting, Parkland saw an outpouring of positive energy as residents galvanized to help salve the wounds of a shattered community. âParkland has never seen so many mitzvot done as in this year,â said Rabbi Mendy Gutnick, educational director at Chabad of Parkland. âEvery project and event weâve done has been inundated with people who want to be part of it; people who want to be a force of good for their children, their families and their community.â
In neighboring Coral Springs, Andrew Pollack, whose 18-year-old daughter, Meadow, was killed in the shooting, chose to remember her by bringing joy to children. Meadowâs Garden and Playground at Chabad of Coral Springs will feature a memorial to all 17 victims of the shooting, joining Princess Meadowâs Playground in Betti Stradling Park, where she played as a child. The process of obtaining the necessary permits is well underway, and the project has gained international recognition and support.
Instead of remembering his daughter in sadness at a cemetery, he will do so sitting on a bench, watching children frolic in the playground that bears her name.
Channeling Grief Into Positive Action
Pollockâs response to the tragedy has reverberated across the city, as parents, relatives and friends seek to channel their grief into concrete action. âOur teen volunteering has tripled since last year,â reports Biston. âThey want to give back. They want to be of help, be of value, share of themselves.â
Chabad of Parkland doubled down on their teen outreach efforts, with a new emissary couple, Rabbi Ari and Yocheved Karp, moving there to direct the burgeoning CTeen chapter, organizing multiple events and get-togethers each week. âWeâre dedicated to being there for the community and reaching out to everyone,â said Rabbi Yosef Biston, regional director of Chabad in North Broward and South Palm Beach. âOur increased teen outreach reflects the enormous transformation our city has seenâfrom being victims of unspeakable horrors to being empowered to respond to darkness with light, helping others more than ever before.â
âWe have been emphasizing to the teens that they matter,â says Biston. âYour soul was placed down here by Gâd for a reason, and the world cannot be complete without you.â
In addition to volunteering their time, many of the more than 1,000 Jewish students at Stoneman Douglas have taken on new mitzvot. âWeâve given out 258 mezuzahs and dozens of Shabbat candlesticks,â says Gutnick. âAnd weâve gifted 14 pairs of tefillin to students who have pledged to put them on each day.â
Following the shooting, world-famous Judaic artist Gary Rosenthal donated unique glass and mixed-metal candlesticks that were gifted to students at the school. After a few months, the supply ran out, with requests continuing to pour in, and Rosenthal suggested a meaningful way to fill that need and to simultaneously pass on the gift of Shabbat candle-lighting to many more individuals in the community.
A Little Light Dispels Much Darkness
On this first anniversary of the shooting, Parklandâs Jewish community will gather to remember the 17 students and staff members lost that day. Rosenthal will guide a sold-out crowd of an estimated 500 people in creating two unique candlesticks: one to keep and the second to gift to a Stoneman Douglas student or one at another school who doesnât yet have a candlestick of her own.
The event will also include a memorial and a musical performance, but the focus, says Gutnick, will be on making and spreading light. âWe are showing that we are more the power of good than the power of tragedy,â he emphasizes. âThese candlesticks will be an immortalized monument of light in every home.â
Chabad intends that this event be the first of many bringing light to darkened communities. âWeâre going to make this opportunity available to womenâs circles and sisterhoods, creating a candle for themselves and another to share,â says Biston. âWherever communities are affected by tragedy, weâd like to send them candlesticks to light up their cities they way they have lit up Parkland.â
On Friday night, Rabbi Avraham Friedman, executive director of Chabad of Coral Springs, will host friends and relatives of Meadow Pollack for a Shabbat dinner, including her brother, Hunter; her boyfriend, Brandon Schoengrund; and numerous cousins and other family members. âThe Pollack family, along with other families who lost loved ones in the shooting, have found comfort and closeness in their relation to Chabad,â says Friedman. âWe have done our utmost to be there for them every step of the way during this difficult time.â
Friedman accompanied the Pollacks to the White House this past Chanukah, where he lit the menorah alongside them at the White House Chanukah party, and served as the inspiration for Hunter Pollackâs wearing a kippah in the Oval Office during a meeting with President Donald Trump a week after the shooting.
In southwest Coral Springs, the Chabad Jewish Center directed by Rabbi Yankie and Chana Denburg will host a âShabbos of Healingâ for the entire community, featuring acclaimed lecturer and local Jewish educator Sandra Lilienthal.
A year after a tragedy that still hovers over a once-tranquil suburbâa tragedy that shook the community to its coreâthe Parkland Jewish community has become recognized as resilient, responsive and forward-thinking.
âWe want Parkland to be remembered not for the attack,â said Biston, âbut for how we responded.â





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