Jewish leaders in Pittsburgh on Monday called on President Donald Trump to condemn white nationalism unequivocally after he said he will visit the synagogue where a gunman killed 11 worshipers over the weekend.
"President Trump, you are not welcome in Pittsburgh until you fully denounce white nationalism," Bend the Arc, a Jewish social justice organisation, said in an open letter to Trump, who announced he will visit the city tomorrow.
The letter was signed by the group's Pittsburgh steering committee and nearly 43,000 members of the public, Bend the Arc said.
"In the Jewish tradition, when you enter a house of mourning the tradition is you do not speak, you listen," said Tammy Hepps, member of the Bend the Arc steering committee.
"I pray that he listens to what we have to say and anyone else has to say who is mourning."
Robert Bowers, the 46-year-old avowed anti-Semite accused of the deadliest attack ever on the US Jewish community, was not a Trump fan, accusing the president online of doing nothing to stop an "infestation" by Jews.
And Trump condemned the shooting and said there ought to be no tolerance for anti-Semitism.
But critics have blasted the Republican president for his frequent anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim comments, and for blaming "both sides" when a counter-protester was killed at a white supremacist rally in Virginia in 2017. Such rhetoric encouraged right-wing extremism, Trump's critics say, an accusation that the administration has flatly rejected.
"For the past three years your words and your policies have emboldened a growing white nationalist movement," the Bend the Arc letter said.
White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said Trump, accompanied by his wife, Melania, would come to Squirrel Hill, the neighbourhood where the synagogue shooting took place, "to grieve with the Pittsburgh community".
Not all Jewish leaders wanted Trump to stay away.
Rabbi Jeffrey Myers, who leads one of three congregations housed in the Tree of Life synagogue building where the shooting took place, said that he would always welcome the president.
"I'm a citizen, and he's my president, he's certainly welcome," Myers said on ABC's Meet the Press.
After Trump's visit was announced, people in and around Squirrel Hill began organising protests, vigils and other public events.
"I think he would cause more strife, ill feeling, and sadness," Cecil Sharpe, 92, a long-time Squirrel Hill resident said before the White House announcement.
"We don't need him for his well wishes."
More than 250 people said they would attend a silent protest during Trump's visit to Squirrel Hill, which is about 40 percent Jewish.