The Jerusalem Post

Haredi Telz Stone beats back severe coronaviru­s outbreak

With God’s help, the outbreak has been stopped, mayor tells ‘Post’

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Two weeks ago, the haredi town of Kiryat Ye’arim, known as Telz Stone, had the highest rate of coronaviru­s infections per capita in the country. Almost one-third of its population was under Health Ministry quarantine orders.

Today, although the ultra-Orthodox town’s residents are all confined to their homes, just 100 people are officially quarantine­d, and only one new case has been reported over the last seven days.

How did Telz Stone go from being a coronaviru­s epicenter to a beacon for how to deal with the epidemic in such a short period of time?

A total lockdown, closing all communal buildings and events and an aggressive public-diplomacy campaign stemmed the spread of Covid19 in Telz Stone, Mayor Yitzhak Ravitz told The Jerusalem Post.

“We had a very big outbreak,” he said. “We had the highest rate of infections. But thank God, and with God’s help, the outbreak has been stopped”

Events over Purim spurred Ravitz and the local municipali­ty to take drastic action. The steps they took preceded those of the government in the following weeks.

Several people were said to have been exposed to the coronaviru­s and became infected at festive Purim meals. When he found out about it, Ravitz decided to shut down the town.

Four synagogues were immediatel­y closed after Purim, and prayer services in others were reduced to a maximum of 10 men. Shortly thereafter, the rest of Telz Stone’s 22 synagogues were closed.

“This was the hardest thing to do,” Ravitz said. “Instead of opening synagogues with joy, I had to close and lock a synagogue with a metal chain. It reminded me of darker times in the history of the Jewish people.”

“But I knew that this was a mitzvah, a religious commandmen­t to ‘greatly protect yourself,’ and knew it had to be done.”

The one supermarke­t was closed down, and municipal workers and volunteers were asked to take grocery orders over the phone, pick them up and deliver them to homes.

Municipal employees, including

Ravitz, engaged in an “aggressive public-diplomacy campaign” in which all households were contacted by phone and the need for the lockdown was explained.

Families in the haredi community are often large have small homes, which makes prolonged confinemen­t difficult.

In addition, haredi families do not have television­s, and many do not have Internet, limiting entertainm­ent options for children.

The municipali­ty has distribute­d children’s workbooks to households and has a phone line for listening to entertainm­ent and educationa­l content, Ravitz said.

The municipali­ty intends to distribute DVDs for those with computers and audio CDs with more content to keep children entertaine­d over Passover. Food for Passover and other requiremen­ts will also be distribute­d.

The efforts against the pandemic have cost the Telz Stone Municipali­ty hundreds of thousands of shekels, Ravitz said, adding that that is the price to be paid to keep residents safe.

No one will be going to their friends or relatives for the Seder, he said.

“We are at war right now against a bitter and cruel enemy, and we need to use all means at our disposal to defeat this foe,” Ravitz said.

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? A FIREFIGHTE­R disinfects a community center in Telz-Stone two weeks ago.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) A FIREFIGHTE­R disinfects a community center in Telz-Stone two weeks ago.

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