Become a Member
Opinion

Forget Covid-zero Neverland - let’s get back to shul

Restrictions on freedom are causing more harm than good, and we need return to normality

February 11, 2022 09:57
F210627GE01.jpg
Jewish men wear protective face masks pray at a Synagogue in the Jewish settlement of Efrat, Gush Etzion, June 27, 2021. Photo by Gershon Elinson/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** חרדי אפרת חרדי קורונה תפילה בית כנסת מסיכות
3 min read

Last week, I called my grandmother before Shabbat, as I do every week. Nearly 90 years old, she is a remarkable person — ever-positive, always smiling and an inspiration to our family and to so many others. Unfortunately, her plans for Shabbat had been thrown off course that day. Normally, she spends the weekend with a member of the family, yet at very short notice they had contracted Covid, so she was afraid that she would have to spend Friday night alone. In the end, we sorted alternative plans for her, so all was well. 

But what really struck me was the evident distress in her voice at being alone again on a Friday night. To me, it sounded as if the trauma of the first lockdown in 2020 had reawakened itself within her. And it made me realise just how raw the mental scars of that period still are for so many. 

The impact of isolation on our elderly relatives and the troubled mental health of our teenagers from a lack of normal social interaction did not disappear when that lockdown ended. The residual effects of it remain powerful. And that has serious implications for how we now move forward as a community after the end of most formal, legal, restrictions.

The point, I think, is this. The longer we continue to live our lives under the notion that restrictions on our freedom will one day lead us to a Covid-zero Neverland, the longer we continue to delude ourselves — and the more long-term damage we cause to ourselves, our families and our communities. I will reiterate, as so many have throughout the pandemic, that we have a basic responsibility to save lives, as well as an obligation in Jewish law to keep the law of the land. I am proud of the fact that hundreds of Jewish communities have led the way in keeping people safe in shuls and other communal spaces. Yet, I think that the time has now come for us to take an honest look at ourselves and ask whether we may have reached the point where our approach may sometimes be causing more harm than good.