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Hasidic Jewish revelers flouted coronavirus precautions as they packed Brooklyn streets late Monday to celebrate the holiday of Sukkot, ignoring NYPD efforts to maintain control amid a resurgence of the disease and a new wave of shutdowns.

Social-media videos first reported by Gothamist on Tuesday show a sea of mostly-unmasked men crammed together at Kingston Avenue and Montgomery Street in Crown Heights, dancing on the blacktop as cops try in vain to at least get them onto the sidewalk.

“Get on the sidewalk, you will be allowed to dance on the sidewalk,” one cop said over a patrol car loudspeaker to no avail.

The group held their ground even as uniformed cops tried to physically push them out of the way of traffic, the video shows.

“During last night’s celebration, several participants moved from the sidewalk to the street, so officers from the 71st Precinct closed a one-block portion of Kingston Avenue to vehicular traffic to ensure public safety and to reinforce the importance of best health practices,” the NYPD said in a statement Tuesday. “No enforcement action was taken.”

The department similarly declined to take any action earlier Monday at an indoor play jam-packed with children in Borough Park, another Hasidic enclave in Brooklyn.

The soft touch comes amid surging coronavirus cases in Brooklyn and Queens, particularly in neighborhoods with significant Hasidic populations.

Even while petitioning Gov. Andrew Cuomo to approve shutdowns of schools and businesses in nine hard-hit ZIP codes, Mayor Bill de Blasio has insisted that the city’s enforcement has been up to snuff — a position Cuomo strongly disputes.

Cuomo has agreed to shut schools and businesses in some areas of the boroughs albeit using a different methodology for tracing the borders — and taken the additional step of limiting capacity in houses of worship after speaking Tuesday with Jewish leaders statewide.

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