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<font size=3>From
<a href="http://tinyurl.com/3okfklw" eudora="autourl">
http://tinyurl.com/3okfklw<br><br>
</a><i>My husband and son took a New York-to-Milwaukee flight that was
supposed to leave Friday at 11:29 a.m. The flight boarded after 4 and
didn’t leave the gate until 4:40, and a half-hour later the pilot
announced it would be another hour until takeoff. At that point a devout
Jewish family, worried about violating the Sabbath, asked to get off.
Going back to the gate cost the plane its place in line for takeoff, and
the flight was eventually canceled. Was the airline right to grant that
request? </i>M. W.,NORWALK, CONN. <br><br>
Please see the response as well as the comments<br><br>
Personally, I feel that this family had no business boarding a flight
after 4 on a Friday afternoon. Indeed, is one allowed to board a
plane this close to the onset of Shabbos according to halacha?
<br><br>
And then I have to wonder once they decided to board after 4 PM and were
on if they. were allowed to insist that the plane turn around given the
obvious Chillul Shabbos that insisting the plane turn around
generated? The following is from two of the
comments.<br><br>
</font><font size=3 color="#004276"><a name="comment43"></a>43
</font><font size=3>I was on that flight and everything happened exactly
as written in the letter. A few clarifications might be helpful. The
flight was on a Friday in mid August. There were many inconvenienced
travelers on the plane, including one gentleman who had been waiting all
day to return home to Wisconsin after days of chemo therapy treatment at
a major New York hospital. He spent the day stoically sitting in a
wheelchair by the boarding gate with his wife. Not one complaint, just
acceptance of his fate. I belive he had to return to his hotel to spend
the night and try again the following morning. <br><br>
Also, a few notes about the family in question. They were fretting about
leaving on the delayed flight well before the final boarding as they were
aware of time constraints and pending nightfall in Milwaukee. After the
cancellation, I happened to see the father at baggage claim where we had
all gone to retrieve our luggage. I asked him if he was aware that he had
greatly inconvenienced a full plane of passengers already exhausted from
spending a full day at the airport. He merely shrugged his shoulders and
showed no remorse or concern for others. I was frankly quite disturbed by
his lack of consideration. <br><br>
</font><font size=3 color="#004276"><a name="comment44"></a>44
</font><font size=3>I am an Orthodox Jew and here's how I see
it:<br><br>
I will also say that the pilot was wrong. I am a seasoned traveler, and I
would NEVER board a plane that late on a Friday, not even in June, and
not even if it was a quick NY to Boston flight. There's just too much
potential for delays to screw up your timing even after you board. If you
take Sabbath observance seriously, this is a risk you just don't take.
You play with fire, you get burned- had they been made to stay and ended
up violating the Sabbath, they would have to deal with the spiritual
consequences of their decision-making; scary for those of us who believe,
but unfortunately, that isn't a good reason to delay a plane full of
people. I will reiterate, if you're that devout, you just don't take this
kind of chance.<br><br>
YL<br><br>
<br><br>
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