Become a Member
Judaism

How the eruv liberated families on Shabbat

Ten years after its establishment, the UK's first metropolitan eruv has become a natural part of the Jewish landscape

February 7, 2013 13:08
After the eruv, parents were free to push their children to shul

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

3 min read

Every morning when I walk to the station on the way to work, I pass a tall green pole outside a pub. It is linked from the top to a second pole on the opposite side of the road by a slender, almost invisible wire. It looks like the training apparatus for a lightweight tightrope walker. You probably wouldn’t notice it from the surrounding lampposts if you didn’t know why it was there.

This nondescript structure, nonetheless, is a Jewish landmark. It is one of the boundary markers for the north-west London eruv, the country’s first metropolitan eruv, which came into operation 10 years ago this month.
In rabbinic law, an eruv converts a public zone into a private one. Within its confines, the prohibitions against carrying outside one’s home on Shabbat do not apply and people can push buggies and wheelchairs. The establishment of the eruv was an act of a liberation, freeing the otherwise housebound to celebrate Shabbat more fully with their families.

“Before the eruv, Shabbat was challenging,” said Anushka Levey, a mother of four children aged from three to 11 in her late 30s, who belongs to Ner Yisrael Synagogue in Hendon. “From being a time to relax and mix with friends, once you had a child you were restricted. You had to wait until they could walk to go out and you couldn’t take anything you needed like nappies. And you were limited how far you could walk. You couldn’t go to synagogue or else parents had to take it in turns. Or if you had elderly family, you might not be able go to see them and you couldn’t push them out in a wheelchair.”

The impact of the eruv was “instantaneous and incredible”, she said. “You could all go to synagogue together, or meet family and friends over meals, or go to the park. A Shabbat is a chance for family and friends to get together, and to relax and enjoy the day. I feel that’s what Shabbat was meant to be.”