Keyword Search:
text size: A | A | A
Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn
   posted 12:09 am Sat November 29, 2008
ABC 7 News - Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn
  ABC 7 News - Share Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn  ABC 7 News - Print Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn  ABC 7 News - Email Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn  ABC 7 News - RSS Feeds  ABC 7 News - Send Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn via Instant Messager
ABC 7 News - Share This Article
related stories:
Stay on top of breaking news! Sign up for ABC 7 News e-mail alerts.
Your Email:  

Two Virginians are among the 150 people killed in a series of coordinated terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, on Wednesday, a spokeswoman with the Synchronicity Foundation said Friday.

The victims were identified as Alan Scherr, 58, and his 13-year-old daughter, Naomi. The two were dining in a cafe that came under attack.

The spokeswoman, Bobbie Garvey, said the Scherrs were identified by colleagues. The two lived at the Nelson County foundation, about 15 miles southwest of Charlottesville, which promotes a high-tech form of meditation.

» video - Synchronicity discusses members' deaths

Garvey said Scherr is a Maryland native and a former college art professor. Alan Scherr's wife, Kia, and her two sons didn't travel with them to India.

Bobbie Garvey says it was joyous to know nine of their members would make a pilgrimage to Mumbai. Days later, she would find out only seven would come home.

The group was staying in the Oberoi Hotel, one of the places hit by a terrorist rampage. Many of the Synchronicity members were in their hotel rooms when the shootings began, but a small group sat in the safe, eating and enjoying company.

Scherr and his daughter were there. Scherr was a teacher, a man who had found peace in India years ago. Naomi grew up on the teachings of modern meditation and hoped to get a more wordly perspective in India.

Wife and mother Kia Scherr is surrounded by the Synchronicity family, shielded from the unfolding chaos. The community believes everything happens for a reason, but why this happened is still unknown.

Alan Scherr

Naomi Scherr

Garvey said four other members of a 25-member delegation from Synchronicity were injured and are recovering.

She identified those from the group who were injured in the shooting as Helen Connolly of Toronto, who was grazed by a bullet; Rudrani Devi and Linda Ragsdale, both of Nashville, who both underwent surgery for bullet wounds; and Michael Rudder of Montreal, who remains in intensive care after being shot three times. Other members of the mission narrowly escaped the attack.

Synchronicity is a religious group based in the central part of Virginia's Blue Ridge mountains who worship under a Swami known as Master Charles Cannon, a follower of tantric mysticism.

The Synchronicity Foundation released a statement that said that Alan Scherr "inspired many people to begin a journey of self awareness and meditation. He was committed to making a positive difference in the world and devoted himself to the community he lived in. Naomi was a bright and lively young woman who loved spending time with people and living life to the fullest. She was passionate, if not a little mischievous, and will be fondly remembered by many of us for colorful hair styles and radiant energy."

The guru and his participants were in Mumbai for a spiritual program at the Oberoi hotel focusing on meditation techniques. They were apparently caught in the gunfire when armed militants stormed the luxury hotel.

A team of FBI (web) agents were ordered to fly to India to investigate the militants who killed four Americans and injured at least two others during a wave of assaults in a commercial center of Mumbai.

American officials were working out the final details Friday with Indian diplomats for the departure of a team of FBI agents, U.S. authorities said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the operation. A second group of investigators was on alert to join them if necessary, the officials said.

The investigators aim to learn more about the origins of the militants who carried out the lethal strikes on luxury hotels, a train station and an Orthodox Jewish center where a New York rabbi and his wife were among five hostages slain.

American lives remained in peril in Mumbai, the State Department said Friday. Warning that "Americans are still at risk on the ground," Gordon Duguid, a State Department spokesman, confirmed the deaths of two Americans in Mumbai, but would not comment further on the victims.

U.S. officials were checking with Indian authorities and hospitals to learn more about the extent of casualties.

The State Department urged Americans not to travel to the stricken city, at least through the weekend.

Members of the New York-based Chabad-Lubavitch ultra-Orthodox Jewish movement have confirmed that a New York rabbi and his wife are among the dead in the India terrorist attack.

Among the three people rescued from the center Thursday morning was a toddler identified as the 18-month-old son of the couple running the center, Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife, Rivka. The toddler, Moshe Holtzberg, was taken out of the center by an employee, and is now with his grandparents

A spokesman, Rabbi Zalman Schmotkin, says Rabbi Gavriel Noach Holtzberg and his wife, Rivka, have been killed in Mumbai. They ran the movement's local headquarters, which was one of 10 sites attacked.

Commandos who stormed the Mumbai headquarters of an ultra-orthodox Jewish group found the bodies of five hostages inside, an Israeli emergency medical crew said, as a fresh battle raged at the luxury Taj Mahal hotel and other Indian forces ended a siege at another five-star hotel.

More than 150 people have been killed since gunmen attacked 10 sites across India's financial capital starting Wednesday night, including 22 foreigners - four of them Americans, officials said.

Early Friday night, Indian commandos emerged from a besieged Jewish center with rifles raised in an apparent sign of victory after a daylong siege that saw a team rappel from helicopters and a series of explosions and fire rock the building and blow gaping holes in the wall.

Inside, though, were five dead hostages.

A delegation from Israel's ZAKA emergency medical services unit entered the building after the raid and reported through an Indian aide that five hostages and two gunmen were dead, a ZAKA spokesman in Israel said. The spokesman had no information on the hostages' identities or whether there were wounded inside.

Jewish law requires the burial of a dead person's entire body, and the mission of the ultra-Orthodox ZAKA volunteers is to rescue the living - and in the case of the dead, carry out the task of gathering up all collectable pieces of flesh and blood.

By Friday evening, at least nine gunmen had been killed, one had been arrested and as many as six were still in the Taj Mahal, said R. Patil, a top official in Maharashtra state, where Mumbai is the capital. He said more than 150 people had been killed and 370 injured.

After hours of intermittent gunfire and explosions at the elegant Taj Mahal hotel Friday, the battle heated up at dusk when Indian forces began launching grenades at the hotel, where at least one militant was believed to be holed up inside a ballroom, officials said.

Commandos had killed the two last gunmen inside the nearby Oberoi earlier in the day.

"The hotel is under our control," J.K. Dutt, director general of India's elite National Security Guard commando unit, told reporters, adding that 24 bodies had been found. Dozens of people - including a man clutching a baby - had been evacuated from Oberoi earlier Friday.

The airborne assault on the center run by the ultra-orthodox Jewish outreach group Chabad Lubavitch was punctuated by gunshots and explosions and exchanges of fire as forces cleared it floor by floor, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene.

Nearly 12 hours after the battle began, Indian troops left the building to cheers from the crowd. Mumbai Police Chief Hassan Ghaffoor said "the operation was ongoing" but in its "final stage."

Israel's ambassador to India, Mark Sofer, earlier said they believed there were up to nine hostages inside. He denied reports that Israeli commandos were taking part in the operation.

Moshe Holtzberg, a 2-year-old who was smuggled out of the center by an employee, is now with his grandparents. His grandfather told Israel Radio on Friday that he had no news of Moshe's parents.

Security officials said their operations were almost over.

"It's just a matter of a few hours that we'll be able to wrap up things," Lt. Gen. N. Thamburaj told reporters Friday morning.

The group rescued from the Oberoi, many holding passports, included at least two Americans, a Briton, two Japanese nationals and several Indians. Some carried luggage with Canadian flags. One man in a chef's uniform was holding a small baby. About 20 airline crew members were freed, including staff from Lufthansa and Air France (web|news) .

"I'm going home, I'm going to see my wife," said Mark Abell, with a huge smile on his face after emerging from the hotel.

Abell, from Britain, had locked himself in his room during the siege. "These people here have been fantastic, the Indian authorities, the hotel staff. I think they are a great advertisement for their country," he said as security officials pulled him away.

The well-coordinated strikes by small bands of gunmen starting Wednesday night left the city shell-shocked.

Late Thursday, after about 400 people had been brought out of the Taj hotel, officials said it had been cleared of gunmen. But Friday morning, army commanders said that while three gunmen had been killed, two to three more were still inside with about 15 civilians.

A few hours after that, Thamburaj, the security official, said at least one gunman was still alive inside the hotel and had cut of electricity on the floor where he was hiding. Shortly after that announcement, another round of explosions and gunfire were heard coming from the hotel.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh blamed "external forces" for the violence - a phrase sometimes used to refer to Pakistani militants, whom Indian authorities often blame for attacks.

On Friday, India's foreign minister ratcheted up the accusations over the attacks.

"According to preliminary information, some elements in Pakistan are responsible for Mumbai terror attacks," Pranab Mukherjee told reporters in the western city of Jodhpur.

"Proof cannot be disclosed at this time," he said, adding that Pakistan had assured New Delhi it would not allow its territory to be used for attacks against India. India has long accused Islamabad of allowing militant Muslim groups, particularly those fighting in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, to train and take shelter in Pakistan. Mukherjee's carefully phrased comments appeared to indicate he was accusing Pakistan-based groups of staging the attack, and not Pakistan itself.

Islamabad has long denied those accusations.

Earlier Friday, Pakistan's Defense Minister Ahmed Mukhtar, in Islamabad, denied involvement by his country: "I will say in very categoric terms that Pakistan is not involved in these gory incidents."

The gunmen were well-prepared, apparently scouting some targets ahead of time and carrying large bags of almonds to keep up their energy.

"It's obvious they were trained somewhere ... Not everyone can handle the AK series of weapons or throw grenades like that," an unidentified member of India's Marine Commando unit told reporters, his face wrapped in a black mask. He said the men were "very determined and remorseless" and ready for a long siege. One backpack they found had 400 rounds of ammunition inside.

He said the Taj was filled with terrified civilians, making it very difficult for the commandos to fire on the gunmen.

"To try and avoid civilian casualties we had to be so much more careful," he said, adding that hotel was a grim sight. "Bodies were strewn all over the place, and there was blood everywhere."

A U.S. investigative team was heading to Mumbai, a State Department official said Thursday evening, speaking on condition of anonymity because the U.S. and Indian governments were still working out final details.

India has been shaken repeatedly by terror attacks blamed on Muslim militants in recent years, but most were bombings striking crowded places: markets, street corners, parks. Mumbai - one of the most populated cities in the world with some 18 million people - was hit by a series of bombings in July 2006 that killed 187 people.

These attacks were more sophisticated - and more brazen.

They began at about 9:20 p.m. with shooters spraying gunfire across the Chhatrapati Shivaji railroad station, one of the world's busiest terminals. For the next two hours, there was an attack roughly every 15 minutes - the Jewish center, a tourist restaurant, one hotel, then another, and two attacks on hospitals. There were 10 targets in all.

---

Synchronicity Web site: http://www.synchronicity.org/

Email To A Friend  Email This Article

Follow ABC 7 News on Twitter

Is Your House Ready For The Winter? Ask The Experts!
ABC 7 Talkback: Two Virginians Among the Dead in Mumbai; Family, Friends Mourn
HarleyFanNow
 



jenny1975 wrote:

 No, his name is Alan Scherr. To avoid all confusion, they could have stated that the group "announced on Friday THAT" Mr. Scherr and his daughter were killed.  Or, alternately, if your critical thinking skills are such that TWO  Playful Winkictures captioned "Alan Scherr" and the fact that today is, in fact, FRIDAY, do not allow you to deduce that his name is NOT "Friday Alan Scherr," you should STOP COMMENTING on the news.Actually, But the idea that amidst so much horrible violence, a man and his child peacefully eating dinner were gunned down before they even had a chance to hide or react, IN FRONT OF their friends, and the possiblity that his first name is Friday is the FIRST thing that comes to mind?




  

Oh Puhleeze, give the poster a break.  Sometimes pictures are referred to with the casual family-use name or nickname of the person while the media uses a full name...and let’s face it, people name their children all sorts of odd names.  Frankly, I can't imagine burdening my child with Naomi but that was his choice and he did it so who is to say that his parents didn't choose to name him Friday.



And how dare you insult someone for questioning the news report?   The original person said "this poor person" so they were clearly sympathetic to the situation



The violence is horrifying, yes.  It is awful to think of a family enduring such things.  But sometimes, people need to have the moment to let their brains adjust to the horror by focusing on the minutiae.   Can’t you just lighten up and let them cope with this dreadful news in a way that suits their ability to cope?   And shame on you for demeaning people for reading the words in the report literally.   I guess the conclusion is shame on the media (and synchronicity’s press office) for having such lousy writers that they can't proof read their own reports.  You should consider being embarrassed about your condescending and insulting remarks meant to diminish their intelligence, understanding and sympathy.



reply to message from jenny1975 posted on Fri 11/28/08 at 3:32 pm

You need to be a registered member of
ABC 7 News to leave comments on news stories.
Not a member yet? Click Here to sign up.
Username or Email Address
Password
Please leave your comments below:
Messages that harass, abuse or threaten other members; have obscene or otherwise objectionable content; have spam, commercial or advertising content or inappropriate links may be removed and may result in the loss of your posting privileges. Please do not post any private information unless you want it to be available publicly. Never assume that you are completely anonymous and cannot be identified by your posts.


TM & © WJLA/NewsChannel 8, a division of Allbritton Communications Company
Please read our Privacy Policy. By using this site, you accept our Terms of Service.
Children's Television | EEO Reports | DTV Consumer Education Reports
WJLA adheres to the ICRA RATING SYSTEM
  {ts '2008-11-28 23:13:37'}