How a Providence rabbi is Supporting Students as They ‘Understand the Meaning of October 7th’

Rabbi Josh Bolton said the students he works with process the events in different ways

A group of students from Brown RISD Hillel erected installations in Providence remembering the victims of the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel.
A group of students from Brown RISD Hillel erected installations in Providence remembering the victims of the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel.
Josh Bolton
Share
A group of students from Brown RISD Hillel erected installations in Providence remembering the victims of the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel.
A group of students from Brown RISD Hillel erected installations in Providence remembering the victims of the Oct. 7 attacks in Israel.
Josh Bolton
How a Providence rabbi is Supporting Students as They ‘Understand the Meaning of October 7th’
Copy

On the one-year anniversary of the Hamas-led attacks in Israel — the deadliest day in the history of the country — a group of students from Brown and RISD stood in the rain hanging an installation in honor of the Oct. 7 victims. The members of the Brown RISD Hillel wanted to mark the somber occasion.

The attacks left more than 1,200 dead in Israel and sparked a wider war in Gaza, where more than 40,000 have died. In Providence, and thousands of other communities across the globe, the events of the tumultuous year have been top of mind for many. Hundreds of pro-Palestinian protesters marched through Providence over the weekend.

Rabbi Josh Bolton, executive director of Brown RISD Hillel, said the students he works with process the events in different ways. Some of the students are grieving, while others want support for pro-Jewish or pro-Israel advocacy work.

“I think that there’s still many, many students who are still trying to understand the meaning of October 7th,” Bolton said. “There’s the notion of ‘October 8th Jews:’ That the day after October 7th, many, many Jews across America on campuses and elsewhere woke up to a sense of their Jewish identity and their Jewishness in a way that they perhaps had not yet ever felt before.”

Bolton spoke with The Public’s Radio afternoon host Dave Fallon about how his campuses marked Oct. 7.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Trying to make sense of another senseless act, this time in Pawtucket
The suspected shooter worked at a shipyard in Bath, Maine, but often traveled to Rhode Island
Michael Black describes lunging at the gunman inside Pawtucket’s Dennis M. Lynch Arena, helping jam the weapon and subdue the shooter as other bystanders rushed in — actions police say “undoubtedly prevented further injury” in a tragedy that left three dead and three critically wounded
At Trinity Repertory Company, two women at life’s crossroads — played by Kortney Adams and Jackie Davis — discover connection, identity and unexpected spark in a sharply observed two-hander directed by Curt Columbus
Heavy metal on bagpipes, art as activism and hip-hop strings? Yes, please.
Three decades after being elected to Congress, Rhode Island’s senior U.S. senator is running again, in part to oppose President Trump