South Plainfield — The nation’s largest Muslim civil liberties organization has thrown its support behind efforts to defend a controversial Jewish boundary known as an eruv, which officials in two Bergen County towns have demanded be removed.

In a statement Wednesday, the New Jersey chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR, singled out Mahwah for criticism. Township leaders argue that the eruv – marked by white PVC pipes on utility poles – violates local zoning law.

“In an era of legitimized racial and religious bigotry, the bigots have been emboldened,” said CAIR New Jersey Executive Director James Sues. “This is clearly a case of religious intolerance hiding behind a thin veil of barely-applicable local ordinances."

Mahwah Mayor Bill Laforet declined to comment on CAIR’s statement.

“We are limited as to how we can respond due to pending litigation,” he said.

In June, a New York Orthodox Jewish group extended a 26-mile eruv from lower New York State into Mahwah and Upper Saddle River to accommodate families who live in New York near the New Jersey state line. The group attempted to expand the eruv into Montvale as well, but...read more at NewJersey.com