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honey or sweet things which are bad for a wound, and he acts con-  a calming effect on his wife, or that the husband will bring another                                                                                                                                  #
 trary to the physician’s instructions by doing so, he is not considered   expert to assist and advise in consultation, it is clear that one should
 a great sinner. So, this is not the transgression of the injunction to   desecrate Shabbos and bring him. On the other hand, if the physician
 safeguard one’s life, and the matter requires definition. Nonetheless,   will clearly not bear any blame, and he will be able to explain to the
 it emerges from Shem Aryeh that one can violate the prohibition of   relatives and the authorities that the woman’s condition required im-
 yichud for the positive commandments of safeguarding one’s health   mediate surgery, there is no justification to desecrate Shabbos.
 and returning a lost object.  This question only applies if the husand will certainly not be of
           any medical assistance, and if one can assume the physician will suffer
 1   SuMMaRy and Conclusion  significantly as a result of performing the surgery without consent,
           and would even be forced to hire an attorney to defend himself. If
 If the driver is a gentile, it is preferable that her husband or her son   these are in fact the conditions, then we must determine whether the
 accomplny her, in order to prevent yichud. If the driver is a Jew, and if   physician is permitted to refuse to do the surgery until the husband’s
 a watchman accompanies her he will transgress a biblical prohibition,   arrival, thus causing a desecration of Shabbos.
 then she should travel alone because the prohibition of yichud is sus-  We find in Tractate Shabbos (42a): One extinguishes a burning
 pended for pikuach nefesh.  piece of metal which is lying on a public street. According to Rabbenu                                                                                                                                                                       20818_efi-ab - 20818_park-C_efi-ab | 11 - B | 18-08-20 | 13:46:25

           Chananel and the Gaonim, the case involves the Torah prohibition of                                                                                                                                                                                            #20818_efi-ab - 20818_park-C_efi-ab | 11 - B | 18-08-20 | 13:46:25
           “combining” (metzaref) on Shabbos, but the Sages permitted it so that
           the people on the street not be harmed or endangered. The question
           arises: Why do we not obligate the finder of the burning metal coal
           to watch it throughout the entire Shabbos so that nobody gets hurt,
           or to hire other people to do so, so none of the passersby are hurt? It
           sounds, from the above, that a person is not obligated to exert effort
           and to suffer when it comes to saving a life or saving others from dan-
           ger. [Based on this, Rav S. Z. Auerbach, zt”l (Minchas Shlomo, Vol. 1
           #7) ruled that if one sees exposed electrical wires in the public street,
           he does not have to stay in place and to watch that the passersby not
           get hurt, but is allowed to call the electric company on Shabbos to
           come and repair the damaged wires. Rav P. Epstein zt”l, disagreed
           with this (see Shemiras Shabbos Kehilchasah, Ch. 41 #65).]
              As explained in Tractate Sanhedrin (73a) we are obligated to ex-
           ert effort and money in order to save a life. Nevertheless, the Sages
           do not obligate us to exert effort to avoid or prevent desecration of
           Shabbos, but permit desecrating Shabbos in cases of danger. This ap-
           plies all the more so to the physician, who has no obligation to lose
           money on fines or on the expenses of hiring a lawyer, according to




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