MASSACRE AT VIRGINIA TECH
Brooklyn grieves hero professor
Liviu Librescu's coffin came yesterday afternoon to a place
he had never been.
In the heart of Borough Park, Brooklyn, the unadorned wooden coffin was
shouldered by Jewish men who had not known the science professor, but whose
fathers and grandfathers were, like Librescu, Holocaust survivors.
A community leader called Librescu, 76, a "hero of the Jewish people" and a
former Virginia Tech student living in Manhattan arrived unannounced and said
her former professor's stand against a campus gunman on Monday did not surprise
her.
Here, Librescu's wife, far from her Virginia home, spoke to those who had
never met him.
"He was a very humane person. He was a hard man also. He wanted everybody
to be 100 percent," said Marlena Librescu, 72, a small woman in a colorful knit
sweater. "His life was only his family and his students."
Mourners inside the hall of Shomrei Hachomos Orthodox Chapels spoke in awe
of Librescu's efforts to block a gunman from entering his classroom, allowing
students to flee.
"We all know in our community that to save one life is to save the world,"
said City Councilman Dov Hikind, a frequent spokesman for the Orthodox Jewish
community in Brooklyn, the largest in the nation. "Look at the final act of
Professor Librescu."
Outside the building, the kaddish, the Jewish prayer of mourning, was
chanted by hundreds as the coffin was placed in a car.
Some noted that the professor was killed on Holocaust Remembrance Day.
His body arrived in Brooklyn about 8:30 a.m. yesterday, with the help of
Rabbi Edgar Gluck, a member of the nonprofit organization Chesed Shel Emes,
which conducts burials for Jews around the world. Gluck said Librescu's body
was to be flown out of Kennedy Airport last night and would be buried in a
cemetery near Ranana, Israel, by sundown today.
As Marlena Librescu spoke, another woman with tears in her eyes walked up
behind her. Dana Dillon-Townes, 28, the former student of Librescu who now
lives in Manhattan, embraced the smaller woman and kissed her.
Dillon-Townes told reporters she was also a family friend of one of the
slain students. "This is just a compilation," she said, "of a huge amount of
horror."
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