Become a Member

By
Norman Lebrecht, norman lebrecht

Opinion

Shuls are closing but I’m trying to count my blessings

'A few hotheads in my sect are threatening to gather for private prayer in full shawls and leather straps outside the gates every morning. If I can’t stop them, I might just join them'

November 5, 2020 13:30
Chief Rabbi credit Getty
3 min read

Why do Jews always have to be first? Barely had the word ‘lockdown’ bumbled from Boris’s lips last Saturday night than the Chief Rabbi was up on his pulpit proclaiming synagogues closed, weddings off, barmitzvahs banned and circumcisions to be performed only on pain of neonates, with just the father in attendance.

Next morning, Cardinal Vincent Nichols and his bishops briskly challenged the decision. The Archbishop of Westminster called the permit to open churches just for private prayer “a source of deep anguish” with serious consequences for the mental health of many worshippers. “We ask the government to produce this evidence that justifies the cessation of acts of public worship,” he said.

Muslim leaders duly followed suit. But our rabbis had already slammed down the shutters. Monday morning at shul, a friend told me she had come to hear the reading from the Torah, knowing it might be the last for quite a while.

In extremis we revert to type, declaring ourselves Her Majesty’s Most Loyal and Obedient Jews, ready to go one big stride further than anyone else in doing her bidding. Lockdown, says HMG? We Jews run to the river and throw away the key.