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Virus uptick in Hasidic NYC neighborhoods causes concern

Published September 23, 2020

NEW YORK (AP) — A spike in COVID-19 cases in a handful of Brooklyn and Queens neighborhoods with large Orthodox Jewish populations is raising alarm bells even as New York City's overall infection rate remains low, city officials said Wednesday.

The neighborhoods including Borough Park and Williamsburg accounted for 20% of the city's COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, according to city Health Department numbers.

“We have a lot to do because we’re seeing a serious uptick in multiple neighborhoods simultaneously,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said at his daily coronavirus briefing. “And it’s something we have to address with a very aggressive public health effort right away.”

Some neighborhoods have drawn scrutiny since early in the coronavirus pandemic for large gatherings that violated social distancing guidelines. De Blasio personally

Dr. Mitchell Katz, the head of the city's public hospital system, said health officials are meeting with religious leaders in the hard-hit neighborhoods, making robocalls in English and Yiddish and sending sound trucks to flood the streets with messages about virus guidelines.

Katz said the city hopes to prevent gatherings such as

“Large indoor activities are a huge problem for COVID transmission,” he said.

Katz said his own father-in-law died of COVID-19 two nights ago in Israel.

According to the Health Department, the number of COVID-19 cases in neighborhoods along Brooklyn's Ocean Parkway more than tripled from 122, in the week that ended Aug. 1, to 381 in the week that ended Sept. 19.

De Blasio said police would help enforce social distancing guidelines in the neighborhoods. Two yeshivas that saw coronavirus clusters have been closed, he said.

Spikes in coronavirus infections have also been tied to other types of religious gatherings in New York, as elsewhere. The

Rabbi Avi Shafran, a spokesperson for Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox Jewish umbrella organization, said city officials are right to call on the community “to do all it can to limit the spread of COVID-19" but should not single out any particular group.

“There are likely people in the Orthodox community, as there are in other groups, including club-goers and protesters, who are not heeding the guidelines aimed at curbing the spread of the disease,” Shafran said. “They need, all of them, to realize that it is dangerous, for themselves and others, to not follow health authorities’ recommendations.”

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