Authorities determined there was no threat and the 17-year-old boy and his 16-year-old sister, who live in
Flight 3079, a U.S. Airways Express operated by
Tefillin are leather boxes containing scriptures
with leather straps that observant Jewish men wear on their foreheads
and arm and fingers during obligatory weekday morning prayers.
“It’s something they had never seen before,” Sullivan said.
“This is something most Americans probably have never seen before,”
In a statement,
Taking no chances, the pilot decided to make an unscheduled landing in
The wires turned out to be the leather straps, officials said.
Police were notified about
Authorities took the jet to a remote area and
removed the boy and his sister from the plane. The pair explained what
the boy was doing with the tefillin, Sullivan said.
He said passengers were surprised to see law enforcement officials board the plane but they were not upset.
Officials decided by
A
statement called the unscheduled landing a “disruptive passenger”
incident and made no mention of circumstances described by law
enforcement officials.
passengers were on the plane. No one took action against the youth and
the plane landed without incident. Passengers continuing to
The teenager and his sister boarded a
Both looked shaken as they waited to board, and the
sister’s eyes were still red from crying. They quietly declined to
comment, looking downward. The US Airway employee asked that they not
be bothered, saying, “These kids have been through a lot today.”
In its statement,
“While we always regret any inconvenience to our passengers, safety and
security must remain our top priority. In this case, making an
unplanned stop in
In an interview with
“They’re young kids,” she said. “They were pretty shook up.
“They’re religious kids — they say their morning
prayers,” the grandmother said. “They’ve traveled before and put this
on and there’s never any problem.
“So it was a very exciting morning for them.”
“They’ll be able to write an essay on how I spent my time going to see grandma,” she said.
Known as phylacteries in English, tefillin contain a
brief, hand-lettered prayer, the Shema, that serves as a reminder that
there is only one God, and that he led the Jews out of
The ancient tradition of wearing tefillin is based
on injunctions found in passages within both Exodus and Deuteronomy,
two books of the Torah.
Although there are slight variations in the
phrasing, the injunction adjures the faithful to “bind them (the words
of the Shema) as a sign on your arm, and they shall be as a memorial
between your eyes.”
Tefillin are not worn on the Sabbath or certain of the high holidays.
—
(c) 2010, The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Visit Philadelphia Online, the Inquirer’s World Wide Web site, at http://www.philly.com/
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.