For 16 days in November — due to runway repair work at Ben-Gurion Airport — all flights would be flying over Holon Cemetery, a problem for Kohanim. Would I cancel my trip?
Photo: Shutterstock
For most people flying to and from Israel entails contacting a travel agent checking times and prices and booking a flight. For Kohanim however the situation is very different. We need to know which airlines and routes routinely carry meisim and make sure to avoid them. Flying over cemeteries is another potential problem but fortunately it rarely arises.
With a family wedding coming up my wife and I booked a round-trip flight to Newark for shortly after Succos. But our plans were unexpectedly derailed when my son forwarded me a news item on Erev Succos: for 16 days in November — due to runway repair work at Ben-Gurion Airport — all flights would be flying over Holon Cemetery a problem for Kohanim.
Skeptical at first I contacted several rabbanim on top of these matters. Each confirmed it was a serious problem. To be on the safe side I e-mailed my travel agent though I was confident the situation would be straightened out long before it became germane to me. But when Succos went by the issue was by no means resolved; the flight route remained unchanged and the best El Al would do was offer to refund my ticket (not my wife’s — she’s not a Kohein).
Should I cancel my trip? My wife could attend the wedding alone but what about our vacation plans? Postpone the trip by two months and miss the wedding? We’d lose the price of my wife’s ticket. My travel agent suggested sealing myself in a plastic bag after takeoff until the plane passed the cemetery. The rabbanim I consulted agreed with me that this heter didn’t work; better to avoid flying altogether.
Create a free account to keep reading.