Remembering Steven Sotloff

Remembering Steven Sotloff

Honoring the slain journalist in his Florida hometown

Steven Sotloff, center, wearing a black helmet, talks to Libyan rebels on the Al Dafniya front line, about 15 miles from Misrata, Libya, on June 2, 2011. 
Etienne de Malglaive via Getty Images
Steven Sotloff, center, wearing a black helmet, talks to Libyan rebels on the Al Dafniya front line, about 15 miles from Misrata, Libya, on June 2, 2011. Etienne de Malglaive via Getty Images

It’s been eight months since Jewish freelance journalist Steven Sotloff was beheaded by ISIS.

Still shaken by the loss, his hometown, Pinecrest, Florida, an upscale community of some 20,000 people, just south of Miami, continues to find new ways to honor his memory.

Steven Sotloff, center, wearing a black helmet, talks to Libyan rebels on the Al Dafniya front line, about 15 miles from Misrata, Libya, on June 2, 2011.  Etienne de Malglaive via Getty Images
Steven Sotloff, center, wearing a black helmet, talks to Libyan rebels on the Al Dafniya front line, about 15 miles from Misrata, Libya, on June 2, 2011.
Etienne de Malglaive via Getty Images

The tributes to Sotloff range in scale from local tributes to programs that are global in reach.

“Temple Beth Am Day School wants you to know that your sacrifice will not be forgotten,” fifth-grader Zachary Marcus wrote in a dedication in the school’s yearbook. “It must have been too terrible to put into words what you went through leading to your death. You have more bravery and courage than anyone else we know. You are a true superhero, a real superman.”

Like Zachary, Sotloff had gone to the Reform Jewish day school as a boy, and his mother, Shirley, was a preschool teacher there. She retired this year.

“She told me she’s proud of what I wrote,” Zachary said of Sotloff’s mother.

“I took into consideration that she would see it,” he added, saying he wanted to convey both his sympathy for Sotloff’s family and his admiration for the young journalist.

After ISIS broadcast the beheading in a three-minute video on September 2, 2014 — Sotloff, who was 30, was killed in 2014, more than a year after he was kidnapped in Syria — the media shined a light on Pinecrest in general, as well as on the 1,300-member Temple Beth Am, where Sotloff’s family are members.

“It was incredibly challenging to find the words to explain this as a school, as a community, and as a family,” said Nicole Marcus, Zachary’s mother, who is a clinical psychologist.

Sotloff’s memorial service was held at Temple Beth Am two days after the video was released. Community members and elected officials, including Florida Governor Rick Scott and U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, filled the 1,000-seat sanctuary.

The Marcus family also was there — Zachary was one of the few students who attended.

“He was at a place of maturity where he could handle it,” his mother said. “He was affected by the powerful memorial service. He learned who Steven was, what this loss meant to his family and the community.”

The service made a strong impression on Zachary, who felt it was important that his school remember Sotloff. “His is a story of resilience and perseverance,” Zachary said.

Pinecrest’s tributes to Sotloff extend beyond the synagogue community. Mayor Cindy Lerner, a friend of the Sotloffs, is leading an effort to create a memorial site in the 20-acre Pinecrest Gardens, a lush municipal park with more than 1,000 exotic plants, a petting zoo, historic buildings, and extensive cultural programming.

Zachary Marcus, who attended the same Florida Jewish day school as Steven Sotloff, wrote in the school yearbook that the slain journalist was a “a true superhero, a real superman.” Niki Marcus
Zachary Marcus, who attended the same Florida Jewish day school as Steven Sotloff, wrote in the school yearbook that the slain journalist was a “a true superhero, a real superman.” Niki Marcus

Lerner said she only had “roughly drawn” details on what the Sotloff memorial will look like. It will include three small waterfalls fabricated of slate, with a gradual decline in elevation of perhaps a foot. That probably will be surrounded by bromeliads, ginger, and mixed tropical foliage.

The park’s horticulturalist made recommendations for the memorial’s location, according to the mayor. “It will be in a public area,” Lerner said. “It will be a contemplative area, in the shade of a banyan tree, by a walkway that leads to the splash and play [area] for children.”

She said it also will have a small plaque with Sotloff’s date of birth and death, as well as a quote read at his memorial service, taken from a letter he wrote to his family that was smuggled out while he was in captivity: “Everyone has two lives. The second one begins when you realize you only have one.”

The memorial is expected to be completed by September, the anniversary of Sotloff’s death, Lerner said.

In addition, the Sotloff family and friends have established the 2LIVES: Steven Joel Sotloff Memorial Foundation, which was inspired by the same quote. Its aim is to provide support and assistance to journalists and their families who are affected by the realities of reporting from conflict-torn or disaster settings.

The 2LIVES Foundation also will provide scholarships for students who have the passion and skills to pursue careers in journalism — particularly those who want to tell the stories of people living in dangerous regions around the world.

Additionally, Sotloff’s alma mater, the University of Central Florida in Orlando, together with his parents, established a fund for the Nicholson School of Communications there. The Steven Sotloff Memorial Endowed Fund will provide scholarship support to UCF students majoring in journalism, as well as funding for symposia, lectures, and other programming to advance journalism education.

Sotloff’s father would not comment on these developments.

As for Zachary Marcus, he sees Sotloff as an inspiration — he wants to be a journalist when he grows up.

Zachary ended the yearbook dedication with these words: “Temple Beth Am Day School is representing America in saying that we thank you for everything you did … Even though your death was a tragedy, it has made us stronger and more resilient than ever.”

Zachary added, “I just want to say that I hope the rest of the world and here in Miami we keep remembering Sotloff’s stories. It’s terrible what happened to him.

“The only way to overcome is to remember.”

JTA Wire Service

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