The bombing on Saturday, which claimed nine lives, including that of two foreigners, and injured about 60 others, was the first big attack on the country since the November 2008 Mumbai attacks.
Like the Mumbai massacre, which included an assault on the Nariman House, the Pune bombing may also have been intended to include the small Chabad House just down the street from the bombed bakery.
However, the community members praised the local police for providing constant protection to the center "at their own initiative."
'The head of police for our district visited us a few minutes ago, suggesting that it's possible that the attackers were deterred by the policemen at our gate,' The Jerusalem Post quoted Rachel Kupchik, who runs the Pune Chabad House along with her husband, Rabbi Bezalel Kupchik, as saying.
She insisted that the bombing will not scare them away, and said: 'We didn't come here to find a comfortable career. We came with our 10 children, leaving a community and a beautiful home in Safed, to be emissaries of the rebbe (the late Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson).'
'A terrorist attack can happen anywhere, but our sense of security is strong and intact. The people here are good. I am as scared to walk around here as I am in Tel Aviv. Our children walk the streets freely,' she added.
Kupchik also insisted that India is a country with absolutely no anti-Semitism.
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