The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sacred fence downed; GDOT moves into action

Care, maintenanc­e of eruv, a Sabbath boundary, ‘unbelievab­le,’ rabbi says.

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

Road workers unwittingl­y remove part of an eruv, a barrier used by Sandy Springs Jewish enclave.

Word spread through WhatsApp groups, email and over the phone: In Sandy Springs, a fence had come down during road constructi­on. It needed to be reconstruc­ted. Posthaste.

Immediatel­y, Mendy Kessler swung into action, driving to Lowe’s to buy some plywood. It was only hours before the Jewish Sabbath. Among other prohibitio­ns during the weekly observance, religious Jews are forbidden from carrying items outside the home from just before sundown each Friday through the completion of nightfall on Saturday.

If the fence was broken, so was a symbolic boundary that encircled Jewish neighborho­ods — an eruv, which allowed religious Jews to carry anything, from keys to kids, beyond their own front yard. The boundary is a modern adaptation of an ancient law that makes

it possible for people to carry in public spaces by turning them into private ones.

Kessler and others built a temporary connection using the plywood. But they also contacted the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion, which had unwittingl­y removed part of the eruv during constructi­on work at I-285 and Georgia 400 after committing to the Jewish community that it would work with them to keep it intact.

On that spring Friday, a public agency used to dealing with contracts and easements was forced to delve into the specifics of ancient Jewish law.

“Their sensitivit­y was just unbelievab­le,” said Beth Tefillah Rabbi Isser New, who called the department and asked if they could wait until Sunday to continue work that would remove more of the fence.

Much was riding on their cooperatio­n.

On that particular weekend, Beth Tefillah was scheduled to host baby namings for two infants. Family members had traveled from out of town to mark the occasion. Without the eruv, the children couldn’t get to their own namings. Their mothers would have to stay home.

“I don’t want to say it was a Hail Mary, but we had nowhere else to go,” New said. “It would have been really sad if the families couldn’t go to their own celebratio­n. Once (GDOT) heard what was going on, it felt like they cared to make it work, and that was unbe- lievable.”

GDOT is used to work- ing around migratory birds, protected plant species, even Native American burial grounds. But an eruv?

“I’d never heard of this,” said Mark Edwards, the constructi­on project manager on the project. “Every single per- son has been very curious, very interested. We didn’t know it existed.”

Edwards, a 32-year con- struction veteran, went home to Google the term. Now, he sounds conversant in the ancient Jewish practice. The eruv’s preservati­on has been added to a list of environmen- tal commitment­s made for the duration of the project, which will last until 2020.

“It’s very important the line is all connected in the right place on the Sabbath,” said Butch Welch, the GDOT program manager. “Once we understood what (the rabbi’s) expectatio­ns were, it was very easy.”

There are two eruvim — that’s the plural — that use areas affected by the constructi­on on Ga. 400 or I-285 as a boundary. Rabbis from two congregati­ons estimated about 200 families used those boundaries to be able to carry tired children while they walk to services, push strollers or bring lunch to a neighbor’s house on Saturday afternoon.

The eruv itself is constructe­d out of fences, walls, telephone lines and other parts of the existing environmen­t, with wire or fishing line used to connect areas to make a con- tinuous circle. It’s invisible to someone who isn’t looking for the connection­s. Rabbis and volunteers check it weekly to ensure that it’s intact each Friday.

“You can think it’s kind of crazy. It doesn’t make sense to people who don’t under- stand Jewish law,” said Dovid Antopolsky, a Beth Tefillah member who coordinate­s the checking. “You build a virtual wall so you can carry on Saturday?”

But the boundary can mak ke a huge difference in the lives of residents.

Before they lived insid e the eruv, Yocohnon and Rozi Goldman went to great lengths to get their then-3- year-old daughter, Chana, to Saturday morning services. They bought a $20 stroller from Target and hid it in the bushes right inside the eruv’s boundary. Then they coaxed Chana to walk the quarter mile until she was inside the boundary, and they could lift her into the stroller. If she didn’t want to walk anymore, they waited until she was willing. They could hold her hand to guide her, but they couldn’t pick her up to carry her until they were inside the eruv.

When word spreads that the eruv might be down, Rozi Goldman said, “We all get a pit in our stomachs.” It can be a huge disruption. Religious Jews are also prohibited from cooking on the Sabbath. So, if they can’t get to the synagogue to eat lunch, as they often do, it could mean a hungry family, stuck at home.

“It’s nerve-wracking,” Rozi Goldman said. “It’s a very big thing for us.”

Joshua Heller, the senior rabbi at Congregati­on B’nai Torah in Sandy Springs, com- pared the eruv being down to a power outage.

“You can live without it for a while, but at some point, it gets in the way of living the life you want to live,” he said.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Dovid Antopolsky, a member of Congregati­on Beth Tefillah, shows an eruv boundary pole (center) and the GA-400 sound wall (background) on Aug. 3. The 400-285 constructi­on has had an impact on the Jewish communitie­s in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs. An eruv is a boundary that allows community members to carry anything from their car keys to their children on the Sabbath.
HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM Dovid Antopolsky, a member of Congregati­on Beth Tefillah, shows an eruv boundary pole (center) and the GA-400 sound wall (background) on Aug. 3. The 400-285 constructi­on has had an impact on the Jewish communitie­s in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs. An eruv is a boundary that allows community members to carry anything from their car keys to their children on the Sabbath.
 ??  ?? An eruv boundary has to be moved to a wooden fence area (right) from a steel fence area by I-285 (background) because of highway constructi­on in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.
An eruv boundary has to be moved to a wooden fence area (right) from a steel fence area by I-285 (background) because of highway constructi­on in Dunwoody and Sandy Springs.

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