The assault on the synagogue unfolded on a quiet, drizzly morning, and came amid a bitter midterm election season. It also took place in the wake of the arrest Friday morning of a man who the authorities said sent more than a dozen pipe bombs to critics of President Trump, including several high-profile Democrats.
Calling it the “most horrific crime scene” he had seen in 22 years with the F.B.I., Robert Jones, special agent in charge in Pittsburgh, said the synagogue was in the midst of a “peaceful service” when congregants were gunned down and “brutally murdered by a gunman targeting them simply because of their faith.”
Within hours of the attack, hundreds gathered at three separate interfaith vigils on a cold, rainy evening to mourn the dead and pray for the wounded.
“We simply cannot accept this violence as a normal part of American life,” said Governor Tom Wolf of Pennsylvania, speaking at a news conference Saturday afternoon in Pittsburgh. “These senseless acts of violence are not who we are as Pennsylvanians and are not who we are as Americans.”
The anguish of Saturday’s massacre heightened a sense of national unease over increasingly hostile political rhetoric. Critics of President Trump have argued that he is partly to blame for recent acts of violence because he has been stirring the pot of nationalism, on Twitter and at his rallies, charges that Trump has denied.
About Saturday’s attack, President Trump told reporters: “It’s a terrible, terrible thing what’s going on with hate in our country and frankly all over the world, and something has to be done.” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that criminal charges by the Justice Department “could lead to the death penalty.”
“Hatred and violence on the basis of religion can have no place in our society,” Sessions said. “Every American has the right to attend their house of worship in safety.”
The authorities said that Bowers, the shooter, had no previous criminal history. But he did have 21 guns registered in his name and a history of anti-Semitism: Before it was deleted Saturday morning, a social media account believed to belong to him was filled with anti-Jewish slurs and references to anti-Jewish conspiracy theories.
“I don’t think anybody really knows this guy, other than he was a hateful anti-Semite who had posted anti-Semitic views,” said Congressman Mike Doyle, who represents Pennsylvania’s 14th District, where the synagogue is. “We’re all kind of numb, kind of in shock. It’s not really something that happens much here.”
As with many other recent mass shootings, this one led to renewed calls from Democrats to tighten America’s gun control laws, something many Republicans oppose, often arguing that guns are necessary to protect law abiding citizens from criminals. President Trump said of the synagogue attack that “the results are very devastating,” adding that if the temple “had some kind of protection” then “it could have been a much different situation.”
To some Jewish leaders, the shooting seems like an ominous sign.
“I’m afraid to say that we may be at the beginning of what has happened to Europe, the consistent anti-Semitic attacks,” said Rabbi Marvin Hier, founder and dean of Simon Wiesenthal Center, who prayed at President Trump’s inauguration.
“If it is not nipped in the bud,” he continued, “I am afraid the worst is yet to come.”