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Rabbinical ruling causes havoc on elevators

TIA GOLDENBERG | 10/26/09 02:19 PM | AP

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JERUSALEM — The Jewish day of rest has become a bit more labor-intensive for Yosef Ball.

The Orthodox Jew and his wife are no longer using elevators custom-built for the Jewish Sabbath, ever since a rabbinical ruling last month outlawed them. Instead, they have been hiking up seven flights of stairs to get home each Saturday, lugging with them their five young children and a double stroller.

"It's been very hard, but we're walking up the stairs slowly and with a lot of patience," said Ball, 29, while pushing a baby carriage with two toddlers in tow on a recent day.

Jewish law, or halacha, forbids the use of electrical items on the Sabbath. But for decades rabbis have allowed special elevators that automatically stop at every floor without the riders pushing any buttons, permitting Orthodox Jews to ride them and live in high-rise buildings.

The ruling last month by one of Israel's leading rabbis, calling the elevators a no-go, has reignited a vigorous debate over the lifts, forcing Orthodox Jews living on top floors to decide if they're up for the steep hike home from synagogue on Saturdays.

The decision stretches far beyond Israel's borders. Buildings with Shabbat elevators are common in Orthodox communities around the world, and residents in places as far away as New York are now struggling with how to interpret the ruling.

Jacob Goldman, a real estate agent in an Orthodox neighborhood in Manhattan's Lower East Side, said residents are not rushing to change their routines. Landlords and building managers have to think about the decree's possible implications but aren't likely to take any drastic measures.

"A landlord can't take away people's Sabbath elevators just because one person said they can't be used," Goldman said, adding that to do so could leave some people housebound on the day of rest.

No single authority interprets religious law for Orthodox Jews. But Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv, the revered 99-year-old scholar who signed the elevator ruling, is one of the most influential voices in the Jewish world, widely considered to be one of his generation's greatest authorities on religious law.

Most members of the Reform and Conservative movements, the liberal streams of Judaism to which most American Jews belong, do not strictly observe the Sabbath and would not be affected by the ruling.

But even the Orthodox community has long been divided over the elevators. Opponents say that while the riders push no button, the weight of the passengers still increases the amount of electricity required to power the lift, thus violating Jewish law.

Still, the elevators, in use for some four decades, have opened the door for large numbers of Orthodox Jews to dwell in modern skyscrapers.

"No young couple is going to move into a ninth or tenth floor building if it becomes a prison for them," said Jonathan Rosenblum, an ultra-Orthodox commentator in Jerusalem.

Lila Lowell, a Bronx native now living in Jerusalem, installed a Sabbath elevator to access her second-floor apartment and won't stop using it despite the decree.

"My elevator is kosher," she said. And she added: "My husband and I have difficulty with the stairs, so we need the elevator." Her young grandchildren also use the lift.

The ruling, decreed last month, is the latest in a series by Israeli rabbis on the minutiae of applying Jewish law to daily life. Top rabbis can count tens of thousands of followers who abide by their rulings.

Elyashiv has been behind other controversial decisions before. In September, he proclaimed Jews could not wear Crocs shoes on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, because they were deemed too comfortable for the somber fasting holiday.

In 2004, Elyashiv prohibited religious women from wearing Indian-made wigs because the hair may have been used in idol-worshipping ceremonies, which are forbidden under Jewish law. Religious women cover their heads with wigs or cloth as a sign of modesty.

A debate a decade ago by another leading rabbi concluded that nose-picking was allowed on the Sabbath. It was under discussion because nose hairs may be plucked out in the process, and cutting hair on the Sabbath is outlawed.

The elevators are just one of several electric devices that rabbis have found loopholes for, allowing their use. Religious families can use timers for their lights and special hot plates to warm food as long as those hot plates were not switched on or off during the Sabbath.

Hospitals and hotels catering to Orthodox Jews have also had to weigh how to address the elevator decree. The plush David Citadel Hotel in Jerusalem said it will leave it up to visitors to decide whether to use one of the four Sabbath elevators, but expects religious guests to request rooms on the lower of its 10 floors.

Jerusalem's 10-floor Shaare Zedek hospital said it has not received any directive on the matter and will continue operating its Sabbath elevators as usual.

Proponents of the lifts say followers need not change their habits.

"I think people understand nothing has changed technologically," said Rabbi Israel Rozen, head of the Zomet Institute, which specializes in Sabbath-appropriate electrical equipment. He supports the use of Sabbath elevators.

"But if people decide they want to climb 10 floors because of this, that's their choice."

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RTIII
Poster of over 0.0135% of all HufPost comments
11:15 AM on 11/05/2009
"...Jews could not wear Crocs shoes on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, because they were deemed too comfortable..."

This has to be the silliest religious decree / idea I've ever heard! "...Sorry there, no, you can't wear shoes that fit well - we don't want you being comfortable!"

Wow.
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04:37 PM on 10/27/2009
This is a typical AP pandering to fundamentalists as the standard of a given faith.

"Jewish law, or halacha, forbids the use of electrical items on the Sabbath."

Wrong. Only a handful of extremists take such a position. Electricity is not mentioned in the Torah so it cannot be said to be forbidden (under some nebulous concept of "rest") by any objective standard of evidence.

"Most members of the Reform and Conservative movements...do not strictly observe the Sabbath and would not be affected by the ruling."

To claim that other practising Jews do not "strictly observe the Sabbath" simply privileges extremists and denigrates observant people who practise their faith with good common sense. The AP does this all the time by the way with other religions too. Look for their code words like 'devout' and see how they are deferentially applied to fundamentalists and extremists time and again.

HuffPo censored a similar post the first time around for no explicable reason. I guess some mods like genuflecting to the fundamentalists too.
12:51 PM on 10/27/2009
"Jewish law, or halacha, forbids the use of electrical items on the Sabbath."

This is not strictly true. What is forbidden is the building of things, tearing things down, igniting or extinguishing a fire.

In as much when you turn an electrical appliance on, you are building an electrical circuit, and potentially causing a spark, which is akin to lighting a fire, it is forbidden. In as much as when you turn an electrical appliance off, you are tearing down an electrical circuit, and potentially stopping a spark, it is forbidden.

With respect to elevators, the controversy is over the advancement of elevator technology. Older elevators used brute force; they used the same amount of electricity to go up and down their shaft no matter the load (how many people and how heavy they are) of the elevator. Whether you used the elevator or not it behaved exactly the same way, so using it could not be said to be building or tearing down anything.

Newer elevators weigh the passengers and change how much energy is used to be more efficient; thus, stepping on a newer elevator builds a circuit that is responsive to the fact that you stepped on the elevator. Therein lies the problem.
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05:43 PM on 10/27/2009
"In as much when you turn an electrical appliance on, you are building an electrical circuit, and potentially causing a spark, which is akin to lighting a fire, it is forbidden. In as much as when you turn an electrical appliance off, you are tearing down an electrical circuit, and potentially stopping a spark, it is forbidden."

Any use of electricity would be tearing something down under your standard since ALL generation of electricity involves inherent and indeed significant inefficiencies (something torn down and lost through generation of heat and entropy). Elevator technology is moot.

Oh and what about putting people to death for 'working' on Shabbos? That IS explicitly in the Torah. Most melakhot are in contrast the product of centuries of self-important fundamentalist babble which takes on a self-referential life. What a sad waste of the human intellect to worry about whether using an elevator enrages some deity.
10:19 AM on 10/27/2009
Those who want to criticize this are ignorant, as if it is being imposed on you! It's not. There is no damnation regarding this issue. Unless you are an orthodox Jew, what's your problem with it?
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05:27 PM on 10/27/2009
The flourishing of rank superstition weakens society as a whole.
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rgilley
08:03 AM on 10/27/2009
Its unfortunate that we as a human society still feel the need to keep religious dogma. What has it actually really ever done positive? How many lives have been sacrificed in the name of organized religion? Only when humankind can say "God is dead" can it start to live as the masters of thier own destiny.
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breeding
07:30 AM on 10/27/2009
Organized religions (is there any other kind?) seem to have a very difficult time embracing new ideas. And I don't mean fads. Are there any religions that easily incorporate cultural change? Wait, and don't have TV shows, they can't have TV shows. And commercials. And no prayer lines or campgrounds. So, no TV shows, commercials, prayer lines or campgrounds. Or lobbyists. No TV shows, commercials, prayer lines, campgrounds or lobbyists. And no costumes. No TV shows, commercials, prayer lines, campgrounds, lobbyists, or costumes. Huh? Is there?
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05:48 AM on 10/27/2009
In a way, I like this kind of cultural diversity as long as those who believe and participate are not imposing their beliefs on others. What a dreary life it would be if we all dressed, ate, recreated, etc. the same.
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04:42 AM on 10/27/2009
Oh I await Yosef Shalom Elyashiv's ruling forbidding the use of mitochondria on Shabbos...because 'day of rest' means 'rest'.
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03:09 AM on 10/27/2009
/facepalm
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02:48 AM on 10/27/2009
As the Atheist campaign in England put it - "Relax, God probably doesn't exist."
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Hdaryl01
01:49 AM on 10/27/2009
What happens if one wears Crocs, picks his or her nose, and rides a Sabbath elevator all at the same time, on the Sabbath, of course?

Is the Sabbath elevator ruling prospective? Or, retroactive? Have all those who have utilized Sabbath elevators since their invention until this edict was pronounced unwittingly, blissfully ignorantly, and unknowingly subjected themselves to eternal damnation?

Folks, this is getting very, very, scary. I don't care if it is this religion. Or, the muslim faith. Or, the evangelical christian faith. Or....pick your favorite.... There seems to be a very unsettling trend that ALL religions are becoming more fundamentalist in nature.

Not good.
09:57 AM on 10/27/2009
You are wrong. The extreme Orthodox are not becoming more fanatic - it has always been this way. You are wrong about damnation, too. Damnation? This is about preservation of tradition. What really scares me is the ignorance that causes folks like you to draw wrong conclusions - and then act out on a group of peaceful people who are debating elevator use on the Sabbath.
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Hdaryl01
12:03 PM on 10/27/2009
"Peaceful...." Tell that to the 1400 Palestinians killed less than a year ago....
12:06 AM on 10/27/2009
I've never seen elevators mentioned in the old testament. This is nothing but exerting control. The Pope could learn from there folks.
09:58 AM on 10/27/2009
You must know nothing about this topic. Then why talk?
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medicontheedge
big loud broad
11:29 PM on 10/26/2009
ENOUGH already with these religious dogmas set in the middle ages and earlier being applied to modern times.... seems to me it's just a case of religious leaders trying to cement their relevence in this modern, freedom of worship world.
09:59 AM on 10/27/2009
This has nothing to do with you. What's your problem?
01:08 PM on 10/27/2009
Angry Much? How come?
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medicontheedge
big loud broad
05:36 PM on 10/28/2009
how the eff do YOU know?
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chandu11
11:00 PM on 10/26/2009
How is this causing havoc on elevators?
Shouldn't the headline say "causing havoc with sheep"?
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wattnot
I'm a Lumberjack and He's OK.
10:58 PM on 10/26/2009
The earth is reallu a ball of iron and nickel whirling through space. So it is, in a real sense, an electrical generator. Knowing this, shouldn't all these fruit loops get off the planet on the sabbath?.
12:07 AM on 10/27/2009
Yes, the chosen people.