This Easter, Is Christianity Still Promulgating Antisemitism? - The Gospel narratives of the passion and death of Jesus have, across centuries, framed how Jews are perceived.

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
easter.png

This Sunday, Christians around the world will celebrate the peace and renewal promised by Easter, but at the heart of Holy Week liturgies leading up to the feast are a set of texts that have had brutal consequences for Jews, not just in the past, but in the present. The Gospel narratives of the passion and death of Jesus have, across centuries, framed how Jews are perceived. The response to the tragic events now unfolding in Gaza and Israel requires a fresh look at this unresolved and expressly Christian quandary. The lesson may be familiar, but it has urgent relevance.

An unfathomed thermal current long running below the surface of a broad culture—call it the culture of “the West”—is still being tapped, even if unconsciously. That current was first generated roughly two thousand years ago, in the way that early followers of Jesus told the story of the Crucifixion, as a crime laid at the feet of the Jews. After the Holocaust made plain that the “Christ-killer” slander was part of what prepared the way for the mass murder of Jews, the trope was repudiated by the Second Vatican Council, in the 1965 declaration Nostra Aetate. “What happened in His passion,” the fathers of the Roman Catholic council said, “cannot be charged against all the Jews, without distinction, then alive, nor against the Jews of today.”

But there was a problem. The Gospels themselves explicitly lodge the Christ-killer charge: for example, in Matthew, which is often read at Mass on Palm Sunday, Pontius Pilate pronounces Jesus not guilty and makes an offer to release him, but an assembled crowd of Jews cries, “Let him be crucified.” Pilate then famously washes his hands, saying, “I am innocent of the blood of this just person.” At which point, the crowd replies, let “his blood be on us, and on our children.” And so it has been.

Despite Nostra Aetate, neither the council fathers nor their successors put in place an effective educational structure that would enable people to understand that the narrative was most likely written not by eyewitnesses but by followers of Jesus in the late first century. Those second-generation Christians may not have known that Pilate was a brutal tyrant, or that any benign portrayal of him as being friendly toward a troublemaking nobody was surely false. The antagonism between the remembered Jesus and “the Jews” was one of which the actual Jesus would have known nothing. Though he participated in disputations that were normal in the Jewish community of his time—such as debates over what exactly the Shabbat laws required, or what deference was due to Caesar—he was in mortal conflict not with his own people but with the Roman government.

So how did this story come to be written? Jesus died in about 30 A.D. In the year 70, the Romans destroyed the second iteration of the Jerusalem Temple, which had anchored the faith of Judaism for hundreds of years. This act sparked an intense religious crisis: What was it to be a Jew without the Temple? For most, the answer lay in studying the Torah and, generally, the Hebrew Scriptures, and in the observance of halacha, or religious laws, including those governing Shabbat and the kosher diet. For some others, Jesus was becoming the new Temple, a transfiguration embodied in a prediction that the Gospel of John attributes to Jesus, referring to his own coming resurrection: “Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” The Jewish-Roman War, which continued intermittently for decades, fuelled this intra-Jewish dispute—a familiar phenomenon, in which imperial overlords contrive to set subject peoples against themselves—and the Gospels, written in the decades after the Temple’s destruction, are a record of one side of that dispute. The phrase “the Jews” (in the Greek, “hoi Ioudaioi”) appears more than a hundred and forty times in the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles, which follows them in the New Testament, and the name usually signifies the many Jews who disagreed with those Jews who saw Jesus as the Messiah; the latter were fewer in number, but their version of the story is what survived.

But the Christ-killer charge is not the largest problem. Inspired by the anti-Jewish slant in some passages of the Gospels, many Christians have tended to remember Jesus—or, rather, misremember him—as if he were not a Jew at all. To portray Jesus as merciful and large-hearted, the Gospels render Jews more broadly as law-obsessed and unloving: in Luke, for example, Jews refuse to help a wounded traveller waylaid by a robber, leaving his rescue to the Samaritan. Gospel Jews are the foil against which the Gospel Jesus can dazzle as flawless. The Pharisees, a Jewish sect committed to religious laws, are painted so darkly in the role of Jesus’s antagonists that their name comes down to us as a synonym for hypocrites, not because that was so but because they were the forerunners of “the Jews” with whom the post-Temple Christians were in tension. In these ways, the “Gospel truth” boils down to a conflict of Jesus against the Jews. The first chapter of John declares, “He came unto his own, and his own received him not.” Not so. The only people who received Jesus in his lifetime—his apostles and disciples—were his own; they were Jewish.

Gradually, across the many years in which the Gospels took shape, Jesus came to be regarded as divine: he is depicted in John as saying, “I and my Father are one.” That made the purported crime of the Jews even worse, since the murder of God—deicide—is a cosmic transgression that’s impossible to adjudicate, much less forgive. And belief in the divinity of Jesus further undercut his followers’ ability to see him as a Jew. Judaism, after all, is a religion—a form of mediation between finite humans and the infinite God. Once Jesus was conceived of in a permanent mystical union with the Godhead, he no longer had any need of a go-between. He had no need, that is, of Temple sacrifice, Torah study, Shabbat observance, praying the Psalms. In following such practices, he would just have been going through the motions. A divine Jesus would have been, in essence, a pretend Jew.

The Roman war culminated in a large-scale Jewish uprising in Judea that was ultimately crushed in the year 136, a catastrophe that precipitated the demise of the Jewish center of Jesus’s movement. Elsewhere in the Mediterranean, gentile Christians—originally from a variety of polytheistic, pagan, and local religious traditions—began to dominate the nascent Church, and their reading of texts that emphasized Jesus’s conflict with “the Jews” would have led them naturally to remember him as if he, too, were a gentile. That fantasy took hold in the Christian imagination. (Images of Jesus typically depict him with white European features and long-flowing brown hair.) “Jesus against the Jews” is Christianity’s paradigmatic origin story, forming, in effect, a spoiled gene in the DNA of the Church. Because Christianity was the incubator of Western civilization, that gene was passed on. That origin story gave Christians and a Christianity-influenced culture a litany of oppositions: the Church against the Synagogue, the New Testament against the Old Testament, grace against law, faith against works, Easter against Passover, Sunday against Saturday, Portia against Shylock—and always, the Christian God of Love against the Jewish God of Vengeance.

An ancient bipolarity that still readily puts Jews on the negative side of a culture-wide structure of imagination is hard to define precisely in present terms, particularly in the context of the war in Gaza. The suffering of Gazan civilians, stalked now by the imminent threat of famine and further destruction, must be paramount in the conscience of the world, and pressure from Washington on Benjamin Netanyahu’s government to stop its assault must reflect that. But the consequences of the origin-story slander remain.

In the United States, far-right hate groups have long traded in anti-Jewish tropes, and in recent years that trend has been accelerating. The more mainstream right has tended to muddle the issue: after a neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Donald Trump found “very fine people on both sides”; evangelicals in the Republican Party have embraced Netanyahu and his purposes, even as a strand of their faith quietly holds onto an End-of-Days anti-Judaism. But, in the current heat, expressions of anxiety about rising antisemitism have been taken by some on the left as just a deflection of criticism of Israel’s invasion of Gaza. Opposing Israel’s government is not antisemitism, and neither is supporting Palestinian freedom and autonomy. But though Israel has enjoyed broad support in America since it was attacked by Hamas on October 7th, a new anti-Jewish energy has decidedly been set loose. The Anti-Defamation League reported a three-hundred-and-sixty-one-per-cent increase in reported antisemitic incidents between October 7th and January 7th, over the same period a year earlier. (American Muslims and Arab Americans, of course, have reason to feel a new trepidation, too: complaints to the Council on American-Islamic Relations rose a hundred and seventy-eight per cent during roughly the same period.)

An old squeezing of a Manichaean vise is at work, and during Holy Week that dynamic shows up with rare clarity. That it is unconscious makes it only more potent. The God of Love whom Jesus preached was the Jewish God; Jesus was a committed Jew until the day he died. If Christians had not forgotten that, the history of the past two thousand years would undoubtedly be very different. And so would be, especially during Holy Week, the place of Jews today.

Article Link

Archive
 
Last edited:

aig christ.jpg

This Easter, Is Christianity Still Promulgating Antisemitism?

The Gospel narratives of the passion and death of Jesus have, across centuries, framed how Jews are perceived.

This Sunday, Christians around the world will celebrate the peace and renewal promised by Easter, but at the heart of Holy Week liturgies leading up to the feast are a set of texts that have had brutal consequences for Jews, not just in the past, but in the present. The Gospel narratives of the passion and death of Jesus have, across centuries, framed how Jews are perceived. The response to the tragic events now unfolding in Gaza and Israel requires a fresh look at this unresolved and expressly Christian quandary. The lesson may be familiar, but it has urgent relevance.

An unfathomed thermal current long running below the surface of a broad culture—call it the culture of “the West”—is still being tapped, even if unconsciously. That current was first generated roughly two thousand years ago, in the way that early followers of Jesus told the story of the Crucifixion, as a crime laid at the feet of the Jews. After the Holocaust made plain that the “Christ-killer” slander was part of what prepared the way for the mass murder of Jews, the trope was repudiated by the Second Vatican Council, in the 1965 declaration Nostra Aetate. “What happened in His passion,” the fathers of the Roman Catholic council said, “cannot be charged against all the Jews, without distinction, then alive, nor against the Jews of today.”
Daily

Our flagship newsletter highlights the best of The New Yorker, including top stories, fiction, humor, and podcasts.

But there was a problem. The Gospels themselves explicitly lodge the Christ-killer charge: for example, in Matthew, which is often read at Mass on Palm Sunday, Pontius Pilate pronounces Jesus not guilty and makes an offer to release him, but an assembled crowd of Jews cries, “Let him be crucified.” Pilate then famously washes his hands, saying, “I am innocent of the blood of this just person.” At which point, the crowd replies, let “his blood be on us, and on our children.” And so it has been.

Despite Nostra Aetate, neither the council fathers nor their successors put in place an effective educational structure that would enable people to understand that the narrative was most likely written not by eyewitnesses but by followers of Jesus in the late first century. Those second-generation Christians may not have known that Pilate was a brutal tyrant, or that any benign portrayal of him as being friendly toward a troublemaking nobody was surely false. The antagonism between the remembered Jesus and “the Jews” was one of which the actual Jesus would have known nothing. Though he participated in disputations that were normal in the Jewish community of his time—such as debates over what exactly the Shabbat laws required, or what deference was due to Caesar—he was in mortal conflict not with his own people but with the Roman government.

So how did this story come to be written? Jesus died in about 30 A.D. In the year 70, the Romans destroyed the second iteration of the Jerusalem Temple, which had anchored the faith of Judaism for hundreds of years. This act sparked an intense religious crisis: What was it to be a Jew without the Temple? For most, the answer lay in studying the Torah and, generally, the Hebrew Scriptures, and in the observance of halacha, or religious laws, including those governing Shabbat and the kosher diet. For some others, Jesus was becoming the new Temple, a transfiguration embodied in a prediction that the Gospel of John attributes to Jesus, referring to his own coming resurrection: “Destroy this Temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” The Jewish-Roman War, which continued intermittently for decades, fuelled this intra-Jewish dispute—a familiar phenomenon, in which imperial overlords contrive to set subject peoples against themselves—and the Gospels, written in the decades after the Temple’s destruction, are a record of one side of that dispute. The phrase “the Jews” (in the Greek, “hoi Ioudaioi”) appears more than a hundred and forty times in the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles, which follows them in the New Testament, and the name usually signifies the many Jews who disagreed with those Jews who saw Jesus as the Messiah; the latter were fewer in number, but their version of the story is what survived.

But the Christ-killer charge is not the largest problem. Inspired by the anti-Jewish slant in some passages of the Gospels, many Christians have tended to remember Jesus—or, rather, misremember him—as if he were not a Jew at all. To portray Jesus as merciful and large-hearted, the Gospels render Jews more broadly as law-obsessed and unloving: in Luke, for example, Jews refuse to help a wounded traveller waylaid by a robber, leaving his rescue to the Samaritan. Gospel Jews are the foil against which the Gospel Jesus can dazzle as flawless. The Pharisees, a Jewish sect committed to religious laws, are painted so darkly in the role of Jesus’s antagonists that their name comes down to us as a synonym for hypocrites, not because that was so but because they were the forerunners of “the Jews” with whom the post-Temple Christians were in tension. In these ways, the “Gospel truth” boils down to a conflict of Jesus against the Jews. The first chapter of John declares, “He came unto his own, and his own received him not.” Not so. The only people who received Jesus in his lifetime—his apostles and disciples—were his own; they were Jewish.

Gradually, across the many years in which the Gospels took shape, Jesus came to be regarded as divine: he is depicted in John as saying, “I and my Father are one.” That made the purported crime of the Jews even worse, since the murder of God—deicide—is a cosmic transgression that’s impossible to adjudicate, much less forgive. And belief in the divinity of Jesus further undercut his followers’ ability to see him as a Jew. Judaism, after all, is a religion—a form of mediation between finite humans and the infinite God. Once Jesus was conceived of in a permanent mystical union with the Godhead, he no longer had any need of a go-between. He had no need, that is, of Temple sacrifice, Torah study, Shabbat observance, praying the Psalms. In following such practices, he would just have been going through the motions. A divine Jesus would have been, in essence, a pretend Jew.

The Roman war culminated in a large-scale Jewish uprising in Judea that was ultimately crushed in the year 136, a catastrophe that precipitated the demise of the Jewish center of Jesus’s movement. Elsewhere in the Mediterranean, gentile Christians—originally from a variety of polytheistic, pagan, and local religious traditions—began to dominate the nascent Church, and their reading of texts that emphasized Jesus’s conflict with “the Jews” would have led them naturally to remember him as if he, too, were a gentile. That fantasy took hold in the Christian imagination. (Images of Jesus typically depict him with white European features and long-flowing brown hair.) “Jesus against the Jews” is Christianity’s paradigmatic origin story, forming, in effect, a spoiled gene in the DNA of the Church. Because Christianity was the incubator of Western civilization, that gene was passed on. That origin story gave Christians and a Christianity-influenced culture a litany of oppositions: the Church against the Synagogue, the New Testament against the Old Testament, grace against law, faith against works, Easter against Passover, Sunday against Saturday, Portia against Shylock—and always, the Christian God of Love against the Jewish God of Vengeance.
 
The author:
James Carroll and his father first clashed over the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; the general suspected several of King's aides were Communists, whereas James admired King as a champion of the poor.
New York Times bestseller and winner of the National Jewish Book Award;

Carroll voiced further concern about the film’s playing out of Gibson’s own theological convictions. The son of a man who denies the Holocaust, Gibson himself is, said Carroll, a “Holocaust minimizer” and a Catholic who rejects the reforms of Vatican II, which called for an end to blaming Jews for the death of Christ.

“Gibson’s bloody film celebrates the violence of the Crusades, then and now, making it a big-screen icon version of George W. Bush’s war,” said Carroll. “Its celebration of contempt for Jews is not incidental here, since for every victim, there has to be a victimizer, and Jews have long played that role in the Western imagination.”
He's a bobblehead-grade NPC.

From his 'An American Requiem', a book about his huge daddy issues:
How could the war be what William Sloane Coffin, Abraham J. Heschel, Martin Luther King, Daniel Berrigan, and even the pope said it was—what I thought it was—if Dad thought otherwise?
I still needed heroes, and had made sure to have them. Hans Küng [another crusder against anti-semitism in Christianity] was one. Martin Luther King was another.
In support of the Voting Rights Bill of 1965, I helped organize a round-the-clock seminarians’ vigil at the Lincoln Memorial, teams consisting of a Protestant, a Catholic, and a Jew. One rainy spring night during a shift of mine, at about two in the morning, a car pulled up to the curb in front of us and stopped abruptly. The doors slammed open. Lincoln’s Doric temple loomed behind the figures who approached aggressively. They wore trench coats with swastika armbands, a melodramatic sight it was impossible at first to take seriously, but which then made us all afraid. They came right up to us, cursed us, and spat at our feet. “Nigger lovers!” one said, and to the Jewish seminarian, “Kike!” I recognized one antagonist as George Lincoln Rockwell, the crackpot head of the American Nazi Party
While out simping for Martin Looter King with his CIA agent jew converso friend William Sloane Coffin, supposedly Lincoln Rockwell sauntered by to spit on him. lol.

The sheep of my flock were not the timid Catholics, the puritans and patriots, I’d been sent there to serve. They were radicals, Jews, feminists, gays, SDS kids, draft dodgers, resisters, misfits, and wackos. Not sheep at all.
He has been an utter NPC his entire life. He would make a good case study for the history of libtardation. That guy spent his whole life jewing for jews under the aegis of Christ.

The TV news people, in their safari jackets and shrapnel vests, convey the panic about gas attacks in Jerusalem. With deadpan neutrality, they report the barely veiled Israeli threats to use the nuclear bomb. The frantic search is on for Scud missile launch sites. The other residents of this wing of the nursing home must be deaf to have kept the volume turned so high. Throughout the day I was in a constant state of nausea, and kept my eye on all the buckets and sinks into which I could vomit.
These TV news people sound terrible. Why do they want to upset me so?

From his 'Constantine's Sword':
Constantine's Sword, a New York Times bestseller, is considered by some Jewish outlets to be a classic study of Christian anti-Semitism:
The entire book is hin slobbering on jews. As he once remarked about Gibson's Passion of the Christ, this book is 'seriously sick shit'.

France "fell an easy prey" to Nazi propaganda about Jews because many of the Vichy-era collaborators had themselves been prepared to see the Jew as the "ferocious enemy"
Looking at Paris now, which is how it is specifically because the Nazis were right and lost, one can only weep.

One answer was offered by the New York Times columnist Frank Rich: "It's a story as old as history. Once any group is successfully scapegoated as a subhuman threat to 'normal' values by a propaganda machine, emboldened thugs take over."
Also in documentary format.

From his 'The Truth at the Heart of the Lie':
The model of potential transformation for this or any pope remains the radical revision of post-Holocaust Catholic teaching about Jews, already much noted. The point here is that the formal renunciation of the “Christ killer” slander by a solemn Church council, together with the affirmation of the ongoing integrity of the Jewish religion, reaches far more deeply into Catholic doctrine and tradition than anything having to do with the overthrow of clericalism, women’s ordination, married priests, or other questions of sexuality. The habit of Christian anti-Judaism is not fully broken, as uncritical reading of anti-Jewish Gospel texts still show, but its theological justification has been expunged. Under the assertive leadership of a pope, therefore, profound change can occur, and it can occur quickly.
My nation, with its still dark attachment to white supremacy, male dominance, elite privilege, and militarism, is a threat to the order of the world—more so lately than at any point in my lifetime.
Again, he's a fucking moron.

Reading his New Yorker pieces of recent years he comes across as someone who believes every thing the news has said his entire life. It's boggling to see such passionate vacancy spread out for 6 decades.
 
Last edited:
Let us remember today how the kikes convicted, crucified and killed our Lord and that he rose again to stunt on some Pharisees and ascend into heaven.
 
The one who handed Jesus over is Caiaphas, by engineering a situation where Pilate could either execute Jesus or provoke a riot by Caiaphas' clients who made up the mob. Every politician of any consequence had clients among the rabble, like Clodius Pulcher, Caesar, Pompey etc. in Rome who patronized street gangs to maintain public order, or not maintain it if that served the patron's purpose. Jesus mocks Pilate for being a bureaucrat who only has power that those above him in the empire have granted him. I have never heard before that Jesus' death was predestined but the time, place, and manner was not. Peter and John both say otherwise in the Gospel and Revelations, as do other passages. Jesus' group of Jews threatened the delicate arrangement of power in Judea between the Roman government and Caiaphas' group of Jewish elite, so Caiaphas arranged for Jesus to be executed by Rome. This was the ultimate sign of the corruption of the Jewish elite, the last straw to turn pleb Jews against them and towards the Troo Messiah Jeebus
Caiaphas was a Pharisee and his followers (The Jews who also followed the other pharisees) were also in on it. Hence why in the follow up it says "Jewish leaders" Who are the "Jewish leaders" leaders of?

You're right in why Jesus less mocks and informs Pilate where he is only given power over him for . It's more to tell him that this is only happening because "God the father" is allowing it too and if not the angels would smite everyone without hesitation. Though I say inform because it's not an actual threat in context.

If he was predestined to die in that manner, then no one would have a "greater sin" of handing him over. It makes absolutely no sense why Pilate and Caiaphas would not be equal as "going with the plan." The "greater sin" makes it quite clear.



" Who said Jesus blood would be upon them and their children?" Why does outside those two passages Jesus point out even further that the Jews sold him out to the Romans? Whether you wish to blame Judas, Caiaphas, the followers in choosing Barabbas, or what have you.

Edit: The reason it's hinted the event was predestined (Jesus's death) but not how is that would require removing free will of certain actors in the event. Argue what you want about Peter denying Jesus 3 times before dawn, but maybe it's less Jesus controlled Peter to deny him and merely foresaw it happening. Some will say this removes free will, but it has also argued the actions taken were known and no control was taken from Peter in such an event as an analogy of another instance of question whether God foresaw the event, or controlled it. Which are two separate things.
 
Last edited:
Remember, being Jewish is an absolute rejection and denial of God. Anyone saying judeo-Christian or simping for jews is actively undermining Christian faith and everything Jesus Christ died and rose for.
 
Each Gospel does kinda make certain parties look guiltier than another.

John (who by tradition is one of the sons of Zebedee, brother of James the Greater and is called beloved and witnessed the crucifixion hiding behind Mary) goes pretty hard on the Jewish community.

Luke was writing for Gentiles and by tradition is Paul’s companion. He goes harder on individuals, but he has Pilate and Herod both take part in the execution.

Mark was Peter’s disciple and he’s harder on the Romans because he’s writing for a mixed Jewish and proto-Christian Jews.

Matthew places blame on mankind as a whole.

John really goes hard on the Jews though.
 
The Eruv basically means that they've technically never left "home" on the Sabbath. Just another bit of rabbinical wisdom to get around parts of the law
The ones in London are interesting because they're not joined up
eruvlondon.png
The first eruv got set up in 2003, but there's been a spate of them going up in the last few years.
Eruvs are supposed to have a "Sechirut Reshut", which is basically an agreement to rent the public space from non-Jews. I can't find much about it online but it seems like the Jews went to the local councils to fulfil this requirement. Also there's different rules - if the eruv is just encompasses "private domains" then they can do the rope trick, but if it contains a "reshut ha-rabim" ("public domain") then they need to build actual walls around the area with doors that can be closed off during the Sabbath, and obviously they can't manage to do that. So some of the eruvim aren't used by all the Jews in the area because they think the presence of the North Circular road means it needs special walls because more than 600,000 people use it (or because any road more than 16 cubits wide is a "public space", which is most roads)
Let us preface our discussion by recalling that the prohibitions of Shabbat are derived from the types of labor performed for the Mishkan. When the Torah commands us to refrain from melakha on Shabbat, it means refraining from Mishkan work, in which the Jews were involved in the desert. If so, then the definition of reshut ha-rabim should also be derived from the Israelites’ desert existence. Since the main thoroughfare in the Israelite camp was sixteen amot wide (7.30 m) in order to enable the passage of the two wagons that transported the different parts of the Mishkan, it follows that only a street equally wide is deemed a reshut ha-rabim. However, Rishonim disagree whether, in order to qualify an area as a reshut ha-rabim, there is also a minimum requirement for the number of people who make use of the street.

Some maintain that any street or marketplace that is open to the public and is sixteen amot wide is considered a reshut ha-rabim by Torah law. It makes no difference how many people pass through each day. According to this opinion, the eruvin that we construct nowadays (namely, the type known as tzurat ha-petaĥ) are ineffective, because our cities have streets wider than sixteen amot. Furthermore, according to this position, as long as a city has streets that are sixteen amot wide, a tzurat ha-petaĥ is not effective for the smaller streets either; the existence of a reshut ha-rabim within an area encompassed by a tzurat ha-petaĥ invalidates it. This is the opinion of Rambam, Rabbeinu Tam, Ramban, Rashba, and many others.

Others maintain that since the camp of the Israelites in the desert consisted of 600,000 men, all of whom needed to walk to the Mishkan in order to help build it and to hear the Torah taught by our teacher Moshe, the Kohanim, and the Levi’im, it follows that a reshut ha-rabim is defined as a road or marketplace that is at least sixteen amot wide, and through which 600,000 people pass daily. If fewer people traverse it daily, it is considered a karmelit. This is the opinion of Behag, Rashi, Smag, Rosh, and many others. Within this position, there is an additional debate. Some maintain that an area still qualifies as a reshut ha-rabim even if it is not used by 600,000 daily, but only frequently or even just occasionally. For in the desert, not all the men traveled on the path to the Mishkan every day. In practice, only in megacities such as New York City and Mexico City are there streets traversed by 600,000 people every day. Even most big cities do not have that many people passing through daily. Thus according to this opinion, most streets are not considered a reshut ha-rabim but rather a karmelit. Therefore, carrying there on Shabbat can be permitted with an eruv of the tzurat ha-petaĥ type. According to this opinion, today the streets considered a reshut ha-rabim by Torah law are mainly intercity highways. Since these roads are meant to serve everybody, and their use is not limited to people of one city alone, they are considered reshut ha-rabim even if fewer than 600,000 people pass through each day
They send people round once a week before shabbat to make sure their special string fence is still protecting them. I'm not really sure what happens if the string blows down when they're at synagogue (because e.g. you're not allowed to use pushchairs or carry children on the sabbath without an eruv, so in theory they'd be stranded).
 
Back
Top Bottom