By Tabby Kinder in Mosaic Magazine
It’s
a wet Tuesday night in Stamford Hill and I’m on an impromptu stakeout
with two Orthodox Jewish men wearing police-issue stab vests.
Shulem
Stern’s roomy people carrier has three child seats in the back to
accommodate his large young family. But tonight – like almost every
night of the week for Shulem and his partner Michael Scher – it's our
undercover surveillance vehicle as we cruise around north Hackney
looking for any prospective criminals.
I lower the window to get a
better look at the “IC1 male” spotted acting suspiciously around
Clapton Common. We’ve killed the engine and the lights, and we all watch
in silence as the suspect wanders back and forth in the rain. He walks
off after a few minutes and Michael speaks into his crackling two-way
radio: “Male no longer considered a threat, let’s conclude.” Three
similar vans I hadn’t noticed peel off in different directions, their
Orthodox drivers nodding to my co-passengers as they pass.
Shulem
and Michael are members of Stamford Hill Shomrim (Hebrew for "guards"),
a Jewish neighbourhood patrol group set up to assist the London
Metropolitan Police (MPS) in reducing crime. It’s one of four Shomrim
groups in the UK (there’s one in Golders Green and two in the Manchester
area, plus a number in various US cities), but this is the largest.
The
22 volunteers are on call 24 hours a day and spend three to four hours
each day driving, walking or cycling the streets of Clapton, Stoke
Newington, Stamford Hill and South Tottenham in search of any crimes
being committed. The only restriction to the patrol is once a week
during Shabbat, a period of roughly 25 hours that entails refraining
from any work activities, i.e. using a mobile phone or driving a car.
“We’re like a very proactive neighborhood watch,” says Shulem once we’re
back on the road.
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