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    RELIGIOUS COMMANDERS IN THE ARMY

    I. Allowing a Sin
    Most religious
    Jews are raised and

    educated in a like-
    minded environment

    with schoolmates and
    friends from a similar
    background. Depending on the family
    and community, religious Jews have some
    exposure to non-religious Jews. Often,
    the IDF is a mixing bowl, a salad of Jews
    from different backgrounds who must
    work together for the sake of personal and
    national safety. With all the benefits of this
    exposure, it also poses challenges.
    One such challenge faces the religious
    army commander in terms of the Shabbos
    observance of his unit members. A
    commander cannot force his unit members
    to observance the Shabbos laws in their
    private lives. In a diverse community
    like the army, we have to be careful
    to respect people’s choices even if we
    believe them to be bad choices. However,
    sometimes a commander faces decisions
    that have implications regarding Shabbos
    observance. For example, if an army unit
    finishes its responsibilities on Shabbos,
    a commander has the ability to release

    the soldiers on leave. If a unit serving
    on guard duty for a week is relieved by
    another unit on Shabbos morning, is a
    religious commander allowed to give his
    soldiers leave when it is almost certain
    that some will travel to their homes by
    vehicle on Shabbos?
    A religious Jew strives to fulfill all of the
    commandments and related laws, whether
    biblical, rabbinic or custom. A relevant
    biblical law is the prohibition of lifnei
    iver, placing a proverbial stumbling block
    before a blind person. You are not allowed
    to give a glass of wine to a nazir, who
    is forbidden to drink wine, if he cannot
    otherwise reach the glass (Avodah Zarah
    6a). A soldier may not leave the army base
    without permission from his commander.
    Does the commander violate lifnei iver by
    giving his permission, thereby enabling
    his unit members to travel in forbidden
    ways on Shabbos?
    II. What is Leave?
    Rav Ya’akov Ariel (cont., Israel) points
    out that the Talmudic examples of lifnei
    iver involve providing someone with an
    object for violating a prohibition. In the
    case of the unit commander, there is no
    physical object (Be-Ohalah Shel Torah,

    vol. 5, no. 29).
    Rav Ariel asks
    whether the leave,
    the vacation, is
    an “item” that
    the commander
    has and gives to
    the soldiers. Or
    does it belong to
    the soldiers and
    the commander
    merely removes
    an obstacle to the
    soldier using it?
    Rav Ariel answers
    that this case is actually in between these
    two poles. The commander does not give
    anything to the soldiers but he is not
    passive either. Rather, the commander
    actively removes the impediment from
    the soldier. Regarding a similar case, Rav
    Zechariah Ben Shlomo (cont., Israel)
    considers whether a soldier must return
    to base early enough on Friday so that
    the person whose position he is relieving
    has time to return home before Shabbos
    starts (Hilkhos Tzava, ch. 93, par. 24,
    sec. 2). Rav Ben Shlomo says that he is
    not obligated to do so because he does
    not cause that soldier to leave but merely
    removes the impediment to his leaving.
    Rav Ariel suggests another way to look
    at the question. Does a soldier’s free time
    belong to him or to the army? Meaning,
    when a soldier enlists, does he obligate
    himself to the army but retains his basic
    freedom? If so, when the army does not
    need him, when it gives him a leave, then
    he reverts to his full rights to his time?
    Or, when he enlists, does he pledge all
    his time to the army and the leave is a gift
    from the army? If it is the former, then
    when the commander gives his soldiers
    leave, all he is doing is relinquishing the
    army’s rights to the soldiers’ time. He
    is not giving them permission to leave
    the base but removing his claim to their
    time. On the other hand, if it is the latter
    and all the soldiers’ time belongs to the
    army, only then we can suggest that a
    commander gives soldiers permission to
    leave the base on Shabbos.
    Perhaps most importantly, it is only
    forbidden to give someone an item that
    is primarily used for a prohibition. It is
    permissible to give someone an item that
    might be used for permissible behavior
    or might be used for forbidden behavior
    (Gittinf 61a). Since vacation time can be
    used to travel home or to relax on base,
    it is considered an item than may be
    used for either permissible or forbidden
    activity. Therefore, it is not subject to
    lifnei iveir.

    III. Assisting the Sin
    But even without the biblical prohibition
    of lifnei iveir, there remains a rabbinic
    prohibition against helping someone to
    violate a prohibition (mesayei’a yedei
    overei aveirah). Rav Ya’akov Ettlinger
    (19th cen., Germany) rules that mesayei’a
    only applies at the time of the sin. You
    are not allowed to help or be a part of the
    sin as it occurs (Binyan Tziyon, no. 15).
    That is not the case with giving soldiers
    leave. Rav Naftali Tzvi Yehudah Berlin
    (Netziv, 19th cen., Russia) adds that this
    rabbinic prohibition does not apply when
    it prevents you from earning a living
    (Meishiv Davar, vol. 2, nos. 31-32). Rav
    Ariel argues that a commander may be
    demoted if he is found to be preventing
    soldiers for taking leave due to religious
    considerations. Even if he is not at risk
    for this, it could impede his progression
    in rank. More broadly, this could hurt
    the progress of religious commanders in
    general, if there is a concern that they will
    mistreat in some way their non-observant
    unit members. It will also risk distancing
    soldiers from religion rather than bringing
    them closer.
    Rav Nachum Rabinovitch (21st cen.,
    Israel) points out that the Mishnah
    (Shevi’is 5:9) explicitly permits this
    prohibition due to darkei shalom, the ways
    of peace. Since there is no certainty that a
    soldier will travel far on Shabbos, there is
    no problem in giving him permission to
    leave (Melumedei Milchamah, no. 10).
    However, a commander should try as
    much as possible to let his soldiers leave
    base early enough on Friday so they can
    reach home before Shabbos.
    We want others to observe the Torah and
    encourage them to the best of our ability.
    We certainly do not want to assist them
    violate the Torah. However, when we
    have control over someone else’s time or
    body, we have to finely balance the need
    to give them freedom to make their own
    choices and, on the other hand, the need to
    maintain our own faith and integrity.