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By
Norman Lebrecht, norman lebrecht

Opinion

Synagogue goals: Beckham knew the score

Children under bar mitzvah age are currently prohibited from attending. If schools can do it, why can't shuls?

July 17, 2020 09:51
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3 min read

My JC mailbag bulges with responses from all parts of the community, great and small. And I do mean small. This message, just in, is from a nine year-old: “Please write something about how terrible it is for children, not being allowed back to shul.”

Well, that got me where it hurts. Orthodox synagogues are now sending out guidance for attendance. The T&Cs are standard. Anyone over 70 should “think very carefully” before going to shul, more so if they have “an underlying condition”. When I was a boy, someone who was pregnant was said to be in “a delicate condition”. Now, anyone past three score and ten is treated as a walking timebomb. One shul, I hear, has told its over-70s that, if they want to attend, they will have to indemnify the synagogue against the consequences of their catching Covid-19 in the pews. How likely is that? I don’t mean Covid —that’s real, but a Jew suing his shul for damages over an act of God? This must be a shul with little faith in its members, and even less in the One above.

At the younger end, we are told, “Children under bar and batmitzvah will not be permitted to attend services… as appropriate social distancing will be difficult to enforce.” Come again? Many kids have gone to school throughout the pandemic as sprogs of key workers, and more since restrictions were eased. Have schools found distancing “difficult to enforce”? Possibly, but with added staff and a dash of good humour they kept kids happy and healthy without a single case of Covid being reported in any Jewish child in London over the past two months (I checked).

If schools can do it, shuls can too. What’ll it take? A few volunteers to keep children occupied and a total rethink of our superannuated premises. All my life, I have seen shuls ignore the glaring absence of one vital demographic. Young mothers stayed away from buildings designed by colourless men in less-sensitive times. Orthodox women were further inhibited by the lack of an eruv. Well, life has moved on, dads now change nappies and there’s an eruv to make life easier for frum mothers to take babies to shul. Since synagogues have reopened, I keep hearing from rabbis on webinars that nothing will ever be the same again. They are right, but we have to make it happen.