As the community continues to react to Saturday's shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue, local leaders of all faiths are working to show support for one another. 

Faith leaders from the Jewish, Buddhist, Muslim and Catholic communities, participated in a joint conversation at the College of Saint Rose. The goal they said, was to heal divisions.

"You don't have to believe in God to believe that every person is of infinite worth," said Rabbi Debora Gordon, from the Congregation Berith Sholom.

They might be leaders of different faiths, but all have the same reaction to last Saturday's anti-Semitic shooting. Regardless of belief, these leaders believe a person is a person. 

The leaders also spoke on the importance of voting. 

"It's kind of cheating to ask God to take away the violence and be with victims when we ourselves do not do the necessary and busy work of making the world in which we live a better place," said Rev. Jim Kane, the director of ecumenical and interreligious affairs for the Roman Catholic Diocese.

The event was part of Albany County Executive Daniel McCoy's forum series called Healing Moments.