Judge Ruchie Freier made a kiddush Hashem on a Lufthansa flight recently when she was able to provide medical care and save the life of a non-Jewish fellow passenger who had a medical emergency mid-flight.
Freier, a Chasidic woman from Boro Park who is also a medic that opened a female volunteer paramedic service called Ezras Nashim, received a letter from the airline thanking her for her work aboard the plane.
Lufthansa also offered Freier a 150 Euro voucher for their airline as a thank you for her service.
Mother, Judge and Women Hatzolah leader…. maybe more titles that we don’t know about. Thank you for being a role model for us.
Maybe also: President….. doctor………. !!!!!!
“Hama’ase hu haikar”
When my friends daughter saved a choking baby her airline bumped her up to business class for life.
and they just gave her a gift certificate? ok at least they acknowledged her.
they gave her 150 to use in flight! It is a joke! LOL But bottom line, she did not do it for their rewards, she did it, and made a beautiful kiddush Hashem.
It’s such a Kiddush Hashem, in these days with so much anti Semitism , it’s nice to hear such news.
They should have wrote some Judge honors, such as Honorary or something like that
“They should have ‘written’ “……
Yes, her title is Hon. (Honorable) now, not Mrs.
What was she doing in Frankfurt ????? Btw, on the bottom of the letter, the signed name on the letter, to the right, sounds like a frum person.
For his Yurzeit.she was on her way home with her mother and siblings.
When you live oot you actually realize how many Jewish sounding last names can also be German and many goyim have them.
When I worked for the city, there was a co-worker, a lawyer with the last name of Baumgarten. According to him, neither he nor any family members were Jewish. In German, it literally means a “tree garden.”
kol hakavod!
please translate EUR 150
Love to see it soon
ברוך ה׳ she was in the right place at the right time to perform this mitzvah! Our son, a paramedic and medical student, had the same opportunity on a flight back from medical school. He received a $100 voucher for a future flight. Even though such acts benefit the airline far more than the compensation they offer, these dedicated people do not save lives for the monetary reward.