After gunfire erupted outside a humanitarian aid event for Gaza at the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington late Wednesday, Yoni Kalin and his wife, JoJo, watched as museum security rushed attendees away from the doors and others who had just left came tumbling back in.
Among those who came in, Kalin said, was a man who appeared agitated, whom Kalin and others in the museum first took for a protester, and who âwalked right upâ to police the moment they arrived, Kalin said.
In an interview with The Times on Thursday, Kalin said he recalled the man telling officers, âI did this for Gaza. Free Palestine.â âHe went into his, âFree Palestine. Thereâs only one solution. Intifada revolutionâ â you know, the usual chants,â Kalin said.
Kalin, a 31-year-old Washington resident who works in biotech, said he still had no idea that two Israeli Embassy employees had been fatally shot outside. So when police started to pull the man away and he dropped a red kaffiyeh, or traditional Arab headdress, Kalin picked it up and tried to return it to him, he said.
The event that night â which Kalinâs wife had helped organize with the American Jewish Committee and the humanitarian aid groups Multifaith Alliance and IsraAID â had been âall about bridge building and humanitarian aid and support,â Kalin said, and he figured returning a protesterâs kaffiyeh was in line with that ethos.
âI regret that now,â Kalin said Thursday morning, after a nearly restless night. âI regret touching it.â
Like so many other mourners across the nation, Kalin said he was having a hard time processing the âsurreal, horrificâ attack, and its occurring at an event aimed at boosting collaboration and understanding among Israelis, Palestinians and Americans.
âI donât think him shouting âFree Palestineâ or âFree Gazaâ is going to actually help Palestinians or Gazans in this situation, especially given that he murdered people that are actually trying to help on the ground or contribute to these aid efforts,â Kalin said of the shooter. âItâs a really sick irony.â
Israeli officials identified the two victims as employees of the Israeli Embassy in Washington. Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said Yaron Lischinsky was an Israeli citizen and research assistant, and Sarah Milgrim was a U.S. citizen who organized visits and missions to Israel. Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter said that the two were a couple, and that Lischinsky had recently purchased a ring and planned to propose to Milgrim next week in Jerusalem.
U.S. authorities called the shooting an âact of terrorâ and identified the suspect as Elias Rodriguez, 31, of Chicago. Metropolitan Police Chief Pamela Smith said Rodriguez was seen pacing outside the museum before the shooting and was later detained by security after walking inside.
Dan Bongino, deputy director of the FBI, said the agency was âaware of certain writings allegedly authored by the suspect, and we hope to have updates as to the authenticity very soon.â He said that Rodriguez had been interviewed by law enforcement early Thursday morning and that the FBI did not believe there was any ongoing threat to the public.
President Trump, who spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, and U.S. Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi have both promised justice in the shooting.
âThese horrible D.C. killings, based obviously on antisemitism, must end, NOW!â Trump posted on social media. âHatred and Radicalism have no place in the USA.â
Israel Bachar, Israelâs consul general for the U.S. Pacific Southwest, based in Los Angeles, said security has been increased at consul facilities and at other Jewish institutions, with the help of American law enforcement and local police.
The shooting comes amid Israelâs latest major offensive in the Gaza Strip since Oct. 7, 2023, when Israel was attacked by the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
The attack, launched from Gaza, killed 1,200 people, and Hamas seized about 250 hostages. Israelâs response has devastated Gaza and killed more than 53,000 people, mostly women and children, according to local health authorities.
U.S. Atty. Gen. Pam Bondi visits the site of the shooting outside the Capital Jewish Museum on Thursday.
(Tasos Katopodis / Getty Images)
About 90% of the territoryâs roughly 2 million population has been displaced. Much of urban Gaza has been bombed out and destroyed, and Israel has blocked huge amounts of aid from entering the territory, sparking a massive hunger crisis. Protests of Israelâs actions have spread around the world and in the U.S., which is a major arms supplier to Israel.
Brian Levin, founder of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, said that for decades, antisemitic and anti-Muslim attacks have increased in the U.S. when conflicts arise in the Middle East â and Israelâs current war is no exception.
âWith the worst conflict the region has seen in years, with a horrifying loss of life and moving images of the suffering taking place in Gaza, what ends up happening is the soil gets soft for antisemitism,â Levin said.
In recent years especially, the spread of such imagery â and of misinformation â on social media has produced âa rabbit-hole where people can get increasingly radicalized,â and where calls for retribution against anyone even tangentially connected to a disfavored group can drown out messages for peace, compassion and aid, Levin said.
âWe have unfortunately been caught in a time when the peaceful interfaith voices have been washed over like a tsunami, leaving a vacuum that allows conflict overseas to generate bigotry and violence here,â he said. âWe see that again and again â we saw that with 9/11 â where communities become stereotyped and broad-brushed and labeled in certain niches as legitimate target for aggression, and that feeds upon itself like a fire, where you end up having totally innocent people being murdered.â
Several organizations have described Lischinsky and Milgrim as being committed to peace and humanitarian aid work. Kalin said many of the people at the museum event were â and will continue to be.
âThis act of violence just makes me want to build bridges even stronger. I think we need to strengthen the coalition. We need more Muslims, we need more Christians, we need more Israelis, we need more Palestinians,â Kalin said. âWe need people that believe that peace is the answer â and that hate and violence isnât going to solve this issue.â