"If a Jew is unwillingly the cause of serious harm to
somebody else, how should he feel? Now the question is what is meant by ‘unwilling’?
You know, if a man kills somebody b’shogeig, he didn’t want to kill, the law is
that if the goel hadam catches him he can kill him; a relative can kill him.
Because a shogeig is also blameworthy. If it is an oness, something entirely
beyond his ability to prevent, you can’t blame him; but otherwise there
is a very great blood-guilt on a person who even indirectly has a share in
somebody’s death. There is a teshuvah in one of the teshuvah sefarim. A man
sent a boy, a youth, to drive a wagon at night through the forest. Now at night
it is not so easy to drive on the road, and the wagon overturned and the boy
perished. And therefore the chacham who answered the teshuvah said it’s a very
serious matter. He said you have to fast so many days every year, and you have
to give away so much money to establish a fund to do mitzvos instead of the the
mitzvos he lost. A very great and difficult teshuvah. Because anybody who is responsible for somebody’s life even
indirectly, unwillingly, has to have it on his conscience always. Very serious
matter."
Rabbi Avigdor Miller, TAPE # 405 (May 1982),
1:33:15-1:34:58.
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