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Tuesday,
September 18, 2001
Jewish
High Holy Days arrive under watch of security guards, police
By Rachel Zoll
Associated Press
The Jewish High Holy Days arrived Monday night with synagogues
under the watch of extra security guards and police, but worshippers
greeted the period of personal reflection
with vows not to be intimidated by last weeks terrorist
attacks.
Three
police officers stood in front of a Reform Jewish seminary
at the edge of Manhattans Greenwich Village as a steady
stream of people, some wearing red, white and blue ribbons,
arrived for services.
Ilana
Schweber, 22, went to worship focused as much on the situation
in the Mideast as the terror in her own city. She said she
would pray to have a better next year.
I dont feel nervousness here, she said.
Richard
Cohen, a tax attorney, said despite the horror of last week,
he wanted to come out and be with other people. I feel
that you cant live your life in fear. You need to go
on living, he said.
Most
congregations activate special safety plans during the 10-day
period that starts with Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year,
and ends with Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Security was
heightened shortly after terrorists hijacked four commercial
jets last week.
Some
synagogues were checking bags and restricting parking.
Few
saw an imminent threat. But there was concern that
given recent events synagogues would become targets
for hate crimes during the holiday period, the most important
time of the year for Jews.
Security
experts have always told us that 75 percent of security in
sanctuaries is awareness, said David Brook, executive
director of Beth El Congregation of Phoenix. I think
were all more aware of it this year than other years.
Brooke
said some congregants had called to express concern about
security. Yet many rabbis expected greater holiday attendance
than usual, as Jews seek comfort in prayer and community.
Congregation
Bnai Jeshurun, a popular synagogue on Manhattans
upper west side, has hired extra security, banned large bags
from the sanctuary and barred cars from entrances to its buildings.
At
Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park, Mich., tickets distributed
to members to reserve a space at new year services were to
be checked at the door. Thats a rare step, said Rabbi
David Nelson.
The
Park Avenue Synagogue, on the upper east side of Manhattan,
began speaking with local police immediately after the attacks.
Weve been advised by the FBI and police not to
give out specifics, executive director Barry Modlin
said.
Rabbi
Matthew Eisenberg of Temple Israel Ner Tamid, in the Cleveland
suburb of Mayfield Heights, said his congregation hired an
extra officer but were not going to let these
terrorists make us prisoners in our own country.
Two
high-profile hate crimes in California two years ago prompted
many synagogues to enact the safety plans they are using now.
White
supremacist brothers pleaded guilty to setting fire to three
Sacramento synagogues and an abortion clinic. In another incident,
a white supremacist opened fire at a Jewish day care center
in Los Angeles, injuring three boys, a teen-age girl and an
older woman.
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