Come summer, the Oak Park eruv will include Huntington Woods. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER 0 bservant Jewish residents of Hunt- ington Woods will soon be able to carry on Shabbat, thanks to an eruv that should be up within the next couple of months. "It's going to encompass virtually all of Huntington Woods," said Rabbi Yerach- miel Rabin, rabbi of the Huntington Woods Minyan and the man in charge of the new eruv. Rabbi Yehuda Kaplan, as- sistant director of the new eruv, will do much of the hands-on practical work. An eruv is a wall, which can be sym- bolized by a string, that encloses a neigh- borhood. The eruv makes a public domain private and enables Torah-observant Jews to carry items on Shabbat which they are prohibited from carrying in pub- lic. "The concept is that through encom- passing an area with a common wall, or symbolic wall, then it's like a shared area, and people are able to carry on Shabbos," Rabbi Rabin said. The eruv boundaries will follow Hunt- ington Woods' borders: between Coolidge and Woodward and 10 Mile and 11 Mile roads. It will connect to the Oak Park eruv, enabling residents to walk between the two suburbs. Some Huntington Woods residents ex- pressed interest in erecting an eruv that would enable them to carry babies to synagogue and al- low people confined to wheel- chairs to get out on Shabbat, Rabbi Rabin said. When the Oak Park eruv plan kicked off in 1985, the idea arose to extend the boundary to Huntington Woods. But obtaining the city's approval took longer than expected. Dr. Jeffrey Last, president of the Oak Park eruv, said the Oak Park eruv has been "one of the most reliable eru- vs in the country. We set things up with a very care- ful design." Rabbi Yissochor Wolf is rabbi of the Oak Park eruv. An eruv can be affect- ed by weather, construction or other constraints that can disrupt the wall or symbol- ic wires. Jewish and gentile resi- dents came together, along with Detroit Edison, City and wires. The lechi can be any type of wire, existing or newly strung up wires, he noted. When a fence ends and the eruv needs to continue, Rabbi Rabin said, they will "put a pole at the end of the fence on one side of the road, another on the other side of the road, then connect them with the wire." El Rabbi Yerachmiel Rabin stands next to an eruv pole attached to a telephone pole. PHOTO BY DAN IEL LI PPITT Expanding Borders Manager Alex Allie and the city com- mission, to construct a viable plan for the Huntington Woods eruv, Rabbi Rabin said. "We need to put up what's called a lechi to enclose the neighborhood, like the wall around the Old City of Jerusalem," he said. In Huntington Woods, which al- ready has many fences that will be used, they are using a small piece of ground molding attached to Detroit Edison poles COLORWORKS STUDIO OF INTERIOR DESIGN 2:09 World of Watches Is Still At Crosswinds Mall Come Visit Us At Our Newly Remodeled Location C/D LU Suite #175 Robert Stewart Photography Cr) U.J 810-539-1181 Crosswinds Mall • 4301 Orchard Lk. Rd. • West Bloomfield CZ) CC LLJ 8 Mon., Tues., Wed.:10-6, Thurs. & Fri: 10-8, Sat: 10-6 <1 ■ If you're considering building a new home we invite you to inquire about our New Construction services: from pre-planning your purchase agreement, to blue print review, from specifications, and selections, to cabinetry design, from hardware choices to finished trim... these are the details to make a house your home 32506 Northwestern Highway Farmington Hills, MI • (810) 851-7540 •