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Light relief in fight on Shabbat sensors

June 18, 2009 13:36

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

2 min read

An Orthodox couple have made a claim for religious discrimination over sensor-operated lights outside their flat which they say stops them leaving it on Shabbat.

Gordon Coleman, the former chief executive of the Federation of Synagogues, and his wife Dena, the headteacher of Yavneh College in Hertfordshire, are suing the Embassy Court Residential Management Company in Bournemouth County Court.

The lights are triggered by body movements picked up by a sensor, which poses an insurmountable obstacle for religious Jews who refrain from turning on electrical appliances on Shabbat. The London-based Colemans use their Bournemouth flat at weekends.

In their claim form, the couple say they have been unable to enter or leave the flat from Friday night until Saturday evening since last September, or to invite Orthodox family or friends to stay with them.
They have only spent three weekends there since October, when they taped over the sensors to prevent them operating — after which they received a letter asking them not to “interfere” with the lights.
But a statement issued by the couple’s solicitors on Tuesday suggested a settlement may be close. It noted that at the recent annual meeting of the management company — which is owned by residents of the block’s 36 flats — residents “resolved to allow to allow the Colemans to install an override switch in the corridor outside their flat.

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