NEW YORK (JTA) — U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot by a  gunman last January, announced that she will resign from Congress.
In a two-minute video (above) released Sunday, Giffords, D-Ariz., said she will step down as she continues her recovery.
“I have more work to do on my recovery, so to do what is best for  Arizona, I will step down this week,” she said. “I’m getting better.  Every day my spirit is high. I will return, and we will work together  for Arizona and this great country.”
Speaking slowly but clearly, Giffords thanked viewers for their  prayers and said that she will always remember the trust her  constitutents placed in her.
Giffords, who is Jewish and has been a member of a local synagogue,  was shot in the head at a Jan. 8, 2011 meet-the-constituents event  outside a supermarket in Tucson. The gunman, Jared Loughner, who suffers  from mental illness, killed six people and wounded 13 others, including  Giffords.
In the video, Giffords said she didn’t “remember much from that horrible day.”
The National Jewish Democratic Council wished Giffords “continued  quick healing on her path to recovery,” and looked forward to “the  occasion when we can welcome her back to public life.”
“We are so tremendously proud of the remarkable determination and  resiliency that Gabby has shown in her amazing recovery; indeed all  Americans have watched in awe as she has taken her first steps and grown  stronger and stronger. While we have all eagerly hoped for the day that  Gabby would rejoin her colleagues on a daily basis on Capitol Hill,  it’s a sign of how highly she values her constituents and her district  that she has made this very difficult decision to step aside,” NJDC  Chair Marc R. Stanley and Vice-Chair Marc Winkelman said in a statement.
Giffords is the first Jewish woman to be elected to Congress from Arizona.
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The American Jewish World wishes Gabrielle Giffords all the best in her continued remarkable recovery and in all of her future endeavors.
			
















