By Rabbi Yair Hoffman for 5tjt.com The reader is probably wondering what those enumerated in the headline all have in common. The answer is that they are all susceptible to injuries such as rucksack palsy, permanent lower back injury, ligament tearing, micro-bleeding, and spinal pain. A US Marine carries a helmet, body armor, 2 armor plates, weapons and ammo, light thermal sight, night vision goggles, a rucksack, power source batteries and 3 days of rations – 90 pounds, on average. Police Officers must carry a heavy load of equipment, including handcuffs, a duty belt equipment, handgun, flashlight, latex gloves, baton, radio, and pepper spray canister – 20 pounds on average. Fire fighters wear and carry a helmet, hood, pants, coat, gloves, boots and air pack – 45 pounds on average. A Bais Yaakov girl carries a Vocabulary notebook, Navi notebook, Chumash notebook, Global notebook, Writing notebook, Literature notebook, Literature folder, Math booklets in plastic sheets , World History text-book, Kodesh Folder with Handouts, a pencil case, a Chumash and a Navi – 26.3 pounds on average. NO LOCKERS One of the byproducts of COVID-19 is that the New York City Department of Education has legislated that schools eliminate their school lockers in order to ensure that students do not congregate in the hallways. In Bais Yaakov high schools, however, each teacher requires that every student bring in her dedicated notebook to class every day. If you add up all of these notebooks along with a pencil case, a siddur, two seforim, and the 1.25 textbooks that must be brought into class each day – you get the following reality: An average tenth grade girl who weighs, say 130 pounds, carries a full 20.23% of her weight in books and notebooks. The problem is further compounded by the fact that in the current state of affairs there is no school bussing available. Not only do they shlep it from class to class, they walk back and forth to school with their load. SERIOUS ISSUE A number of young women interviewed for this article responded that their backs hurt them all day long. There is more. All research shows that once someone is harmed with a load-carrying injury – they are by far more susceptible to future injuries. There is one more point. Marines carry the load during combat or a during a mission. Bais Yaakov girls in high school do it for a full four years. THE MITZVOS INVOLVED ‘V’ahavta L’rei’acha Kamocha.’ The Ramban, in Toras HaAdam Sha’ar HaSakanah (pp. 42–43), understands the verse of “And love thy neighbor as yourself” as a directive to save our peers from medical danger as well. How can we not have empathy when we see these struggling young girls? Hashavas Aveidah. The verse in Parashas Ki Seitzei (Devarim 22:2) discusses the mitzvah of hashavas aveidah, returning a lost object, with the words, “V’hasheivoso lo,” “and you shall return it to him.” The Gemara in Sanhedrin (73a), however, includes within its understanding of these words the obligation of returning “his own life to him as well.” Permanent back pain is no picnic. It is highly probable that it is to this general mitzvah that the Shulchan Aruch refers in Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 325. ‘Thy Brother’s Blood.’ There is a negative mitzvah of not standing […]
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