Saving Your Life over Another’s

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One of the most beloved ideals that Jews uphold is the utmost value on human life. What do we do when we have to choose between two innocent lives? Here’s an example:

Someone is driving along a narrow cliff road. That person is coming around a bend at a reasonable speed. At the same moment a cyclist is rounding the same bend on his bicycle from the opposite direction. Then, at the worst possible time, the cyclist loses control and heads straight into the path of the car. Due to sheer physics the driver has only two options: 1) attempt to brake (but will still hit the cyclist with deadly force), or 2) navigate the car off the cliff (which will cause certain death).

Although there is fault on both sides (the driver should have slowed down and the cyclist not lost control), neither party meant to harm the other. Whose life should the driver choose?

The Aish Rabbi Replies

Murder is one of the three cardinal sins for which one must forfeit his own life before taking the life of another. If someone holds a gun to your head and says, “Kill this other person or I'll kill you,” you must choose your own death over killing another. The Talmud explains the reason for this is: "Who says your own 'blood is thicker' than the other person's blood? Perhaps his 'blood is thicker' than yours." This means that you have no way of knowing who is more important in the eyes of God and therefore do not have the right to take another's life for the sake of your own. (Sanhedrin 74a)

The commentators explain that this Talmudic ruling applies only if you are told to perform an action to kill the other person. If, however, the thug wants to throw you onto another person in a way which will kill the other, you need not forfeit your life to prevent that occurrence. Since you will be doing no action, you are like the axe in the hand of the chopper; it is the chopper doing the chopping and the axe is regarded as an extension of his hand. In that case, since you are doing no action, you may apply the opposite reasoning: Who says the other's blood is thicker; maybe your blood is thicker! (Tosefos and Ra'n loc cit; Shulchan Aruch YD 157:1)

A similar ruling is found in reference to the question of two Jews walking in the desert, one with a flask of water and one with nothing. There's only enough water for one of them to make it to the village; if they both drink they both will die before they make it. One opinion is that he should let his friend drink and they will both die. The final ruling is like the opinion of Rabbi Akiva who learns from the verse "your brother should live with you" (Leviticus 25), which teaches that your own life precedes the life of another. You have the right to drink your own water and live even though the other person will die. This also is because you are not performing an act to kill the other; you are only passively doing so by saving yourself. (Talmud, Bava Metzia 62a)

Fascinating, heart wrenching questions arose on these lines in the concentration camps: Was one permitted to get himself excused from a list of people doomed to the crematoria if to do so would necessarily mean his place would be filled by another; is that considered an active or passive taking of another's life? This question is discussed at length by Holocaust-era authorities, recording the answers they gave when this question was actually posed to them.

In your theoretical case, the driver of the car is performing no action to hurt the cyclist in order to save himself; even braking would not stop the car in time to save him. He therefore would not be obligated to drive off the cliff to save the cyclist who put himself in the path of danger.

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