They were colleagues, and they were a couple, days away from a marriage proposal.
But the interwoven lives of Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim were brutally cut short Wednesday evening, when the two Israeli Embassy staffers were shot while leaving a young diplomats' reception at the Capital Jewish Museum. The suspect shouted ''Free Palestine'' as he was being arrested, a witness said.
Milgrim, an American from Kansas, had devoted her burgeoning career to bringing people together to look for ways to promote peace and combat climate change, those who knew her say.
Lischinsky, an Israeli citizen who spent some of his childhood in Germany, had a deep attachment to the Jewish state and an interest in bridging cultural and religious divides.
He had bought an engagement ring and was just days away from proposing to Milgrim on a planned trip to Jerusalem, according to Israeli Ambassador Yechiel Leiter.
''A young couple with a bright future, planning their life together,'' said Ron Prosor, a veteran Israeli diplomat who knew Lischinsky.
Yaron Lischinsky
Lischinsky grew up partly in the German city of Nuremberg and moved to Israel at 16. A Christian, he served in the Israeli military ''and chose to dedicate his life to the state of Israel," said Prosor, who taught Lischinsky at Israel's Reichman University. Lischinsky earned a master's degree in government, diplomacy and strategy there.