Up Front Setting Boundaries LYNNE MEREDITH COHN Special to The Jewish News T Rabbi Eli Jundef "encloses" two square miles of West Bloomfield to allow observant Jews to carry on Shabbat. public domain under Halachah, Jewish law.) Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg, founder of Bais Chabad of West Bloomfield on Maple, east of Orchard Lake Road, constructed an eruv years ago. But that enclosure ends at Orchard Lake Road. The two eruvim will not connect. An eruv is constructed from wires that "enclose" a public area, making the entire neighborhood private. The wires must run along the top of poles, said Jundef, to be considered kosher. The rabbi must add a lechi to those utility poles where wires run below the top. Jundef requested West Bloomfield's permission to build the eruv. "We walked the route with him, in the woods, over the streams, through the mud, between the houses," said Supervisor Jeddy Hood. "The town- ship wrote a letter introducing him and what he was doing and that the township was working with him, encouraging residents to graciously allow him access to their property." It wasn't a matter of "allowing" an eruv, said Hood, but rather "working with the rabbi so we can accommodate all of our concerns for the environ- mental impact. For example, we did not want to put a wire directly across a wetland because of birds flying down to land on the water. It was a real working-together relationship. I think he navy blue Ford Club Wagon parked alongside Maple Road is a likely sign that Rabbi Eli Jundef is trudging through mud and vegetation somewhere nearby. The sun beats down on the bearded rabbi, who has been walking around West Bloomfield for three years in an effort to give observant families who live west of Orchard Lake Road more freedom on Shabbat. Rabbi Jundef, of Ohel Moed of Shomrey Emunah, wears a hard hat and shirtsleeves as he walks along the dusty shoulder. He follows Steve Wolff, an independent contractor in a bright orange vest who climbs tele- phone poles to secure bamboo posts and a thin wire, known in Hebrew as a lechi. They are building an eruv, a boundary that will enable Jews to carry on Shabbat. "It can be challeng- ing," says the Orthodox rabbi. "There are trees in the way [that] you have to prune." The growing obser- vant community west of Orchard Lake Road, which is dispersed among Ohel Moed, Young Israel-West Bloomfield, B'nai Israel-Shan rey Zedek and B'nai Moshe, has faced one obstacle: On Shabbat, Jews are pro- hibited from carrying anything from a pri- vate to a public domain, including a baby stroller or wheel- chair. (A private domain includes only an enclosed area; a per- son's yard qualifies as Rabbi Eli Jundef works with independent contractor Steve Wolff to construct an eruv in West Bloomfield. 6/5 1998 8 . it's wonderful that we have this variety and diversity in our community." Jundef has knocked on doors in the neighborhood to request permission for the eruv to run across private prop- erty. We are grateful to many proper- ty owners who were sensitive to the needs of the handicapped and families with small children, to use their prop- erty to make the eruv," he said. Dr. Steve Borzak, a member of the Eruv Committee, said the group has raised about half of the $25,000 need- ed to build the eruv. That amount covers construction and the first year of maintenance, including employing somedne to check the eruv every Friday to make sure it's intact for Shabbat. ,-/ "We're raising the money as we go along, doing construction bit by bit as we get more money. Rabbi Jundef has donated probably 1,000 hours of his time without compensation," Borzak said. The eruv could be completed this summer. Detroit Edison and Ameritech "have been very coopera- tive. It's a difficult concept to explain to a non-Jew, even tough to explain to a Jew," he said. "We have a child 7 1/2 months old, so it's going to make a huge difference for my wife, who generally stays at home with the kids," Borzak said. "Ideally, the boundaries of the eruv would be much larger, but because of the difficulty involved and the wetlands and the terrain, Rabbi Jundef chose to go for an expedi- tious two- square-mile area." The rabbi excluded wetlands - from the enclosure by closing off non-traversable parts of the township with a separate eruv. An eruv must contain only land that people can walk across, Jundef said. Said Borzak, "It really is a community eruv, not just one shul. Rabbi [Leonardo] Bitran of B'nai Israel-Shan rey Zedek was very enthusiastic; he sees it as representing a real growth oppor- tunity for his shul as well. There are people who prefer a Conservative shul who would hold by the concept of eruv, not carry on Shabbos because of [the lack of an] eruv." ❑ Donations can be made to the West Bloomfield Eruv Committee, 5188 Kingsfield Dr., West Bloomfield, 48322.