Praying Passenger Removed From Plane At JFK

by insaniac | April 19, 2008 at 10:29 am
358 views | 2 Recommendations | 2 comments
The Orthodox Jewish man, who wore a full beard, a black hat and a long black coat, stood near the lavatories and began saying his prayers while the United Airlines jet was being boarded at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Wednesday night, fellow passenger Ori Brafman said.

When flight attendants urged the man, who was carrying a religious book, to take his seat, he ignored them, Brafman said. Two friends, who were seated, tried to tell the attendants that the man couldn't stop until his prayers were over in about 2 minutes, he said.

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"He doesn't respond to them, but his friends explain that once you start praying you can't stop," said Brafman, who was seated three rows away.

When the man finally stopped praying, he explained that he couldn't interrupt his religious ritual and wasn't trying to be rude. But the attendants summoned a guard to remove him, said Brafman, a writer who had been visiting New York to talk to publishers.

Chucking him off the plane seems a bit counter-productive: surely it would delay the flight even further. I cannot help but wonder if the same would have happened if the person praying had done so in English (I presume the flight attendants weren't also Orthodox, as they would likely not have interfered in the first place).

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eastvanray

How do you think he would have been treated if he were a Muslim praying to Mecca?  I think the inconsiderate Jewish man got what he deserved.  Couldn't he wait or is his prayer more important than all the other passengers?

JD Rucker
JD Rucker
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 18:50 on April 27th, 2008

insaniac, I like this story. It's good stuff.  This is an interesting topic to discuss.  Does religion trump courtesy?  Should it?  Can they co-exist?  Was there a way for him to delay his prayer, or was it mandated at that exact moment by his beliefs?  I am not versed in these things.  I pray privately myself.  Still, when does freedom of religion stop and situational common sense start?

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