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B A LT I M O R E J E W I S H H O M E . C O M
THE BALTIMORE JEWISH HOME
SEPTEMBER 16, 2021
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OCTOBER 29, 2015 | The Jewish Home
Israel Today
Getting Used to Not Knowing By RaďŹ Sackville
I
consider myself a law-abiding citizen. I follow the rules; I never look to break them. I was brought up in Melbourne, Australia, a law-abiding society where today its citizens have submitted, albeit begrudgingly, to the longest government Covid lockdown
in the world, stringencies the likes unseen in the U.S. or Israel. That said, the era of Covid has blurred the lines between what is and is not legal and has left most of us in a state of constant bewilderment. Covid has turned the passage of many
countriesâ legislative processes into a comedy of never-ending errors: democracies that once took generations to develop their legislative powers now roll out new laws ad-hoc, many of which are driven by politics and misinformation. We had spent the summer in Far Rockaway, New York, with our children returning eight days before the start of the school year. Informed during our vacation that weâd need to go into isolation, we mentally prepared ourselves for a week of solitude, otherwise known as âclimbing the walls.â Coming back into the country gave us a taste of things to come. The arrival hall at Ben Gurion Airport was dark and unwelcoming. Today, this usually vibrant space serves as a portal to the left, where, through the doors at the hallwayâs end, a hangar-like area has been tented and primed for Covid testing. Once tested I turned to an oďŹcial-looking chap standing at the taxi stand. âWhat now?â I asked him. âIâm in security,â he replied sternly in the apparent belief that he was absolved of further engagement with me. I leaned in towards him and quipped, âEven if you donât want to answer, it doesnât hurt to smile.â He tried hard but couldnât resist a smile. A citizen behind him said, âItâs like the game of Monopoly; by arriving from overseas you just picked up
a âGo to Jailâ card which sends you home for a week, or something like that.â I asked him what he meant by âsomething like that.â âJust wait. Youâll see.â His use of metaphor was rather quirky, for he then asked me if Iâd ever had an eye test which makes the world look blurry. I told him I had. âWell, itâs something like that.â Being an abiding citizenâŚyada, yada, we went home. While in New York, I called the rav of our shul in Maâalot to ask him whether I should risk turning up for minyanim during the seven days of isolation. Iâd turn off my phone so I couldnât be tracked. His answer was exquisite; he told me he didnât recommend the encouragement of moral delinquency. So I found someone to say Kaddish for me and together with my wife entered the small confines of our apartment, where we were to wait seven days before our next Covid test. My friend Noam organized a couple of evening street minyanim for me so I could say Kaddish. The gathered men below my balcony replied amen to my Kaddish. I now know how Juliet felt while Romeo was swooned below her window. Two days later, we got the first of two texts and emails from the Covid testing service and the Ministry of Health. The former informed us we had tested negative at the airport. The latter related that we were mandated to remain at home for fourteen days, not seven. Whaaat?! Iâd been told seven days. What on earth did