Naftali Bennett, Israel’s education minister who also oversees diaspora affairs, tweeted that he was on his way to Pittsburgh “to be with our sisters and brothers on their darkest hour.”

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“When Jews are murdered in Pittsburgh, the people of Israel feel the pain,” he wrote.

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As The Washington Post reported on Saturday, Robert Bowers, 46, was taken into custody on Saturday and is accused of engaging in a gun battle with police at Tree of Life synagogue in the western Pennsylvania city, where witnesses told police the shooter shouted anti-Semitic slurs and then opened fire with an assault rifle. The attack is being investigated as a hate crime.

The Anti-Defamation League said the shooting was “likely the deadliest attack on the Jewish community in the history of the United States.”

The Jerusalem Post quoted Dov Khenin, a member of the Joint List Arab faction in the Knesset, as saying that he suspects “the attack is an expression of the growth of dangerous anti-Semitism in American society — a part of the racist and violent wave during the presidency of Trump. A leadership that gives way to incitement.”

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Various Israeli leaders offered messages of solidarity with the Pittsburgh Jewish community. Israeli President Reuven Rivlin tweeted that “We are thinking of ‘our brothers and sisters, the whole house of Israel, in time of trouble,' as we say in the morning prayers.”

Danny Danon, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, was quoted in the Jerusalem Post as saying “we will stand together like a rock against hatred and against those who try to harm Jews all over the world.”

In Tel Aviv, the municipal building was lit up to resemble the American flag in the aftermath of the shooting.