Jewish Delta Flight Attendant Sues Over Ham Sandwich, Yom Kippur

Jewish Delta Flight Attendant Sues Over Ham Sandwich, Yom Kippur

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A Delta flight attendant has filed a lawsuit against the airline, alleging antisemitism (thanks to Justin for flagging this). This is an interesting case, because I can’t help but think that maybe this person just has unrealistic expectations about their employment.

Flight attendant accuses Delta of antisemitism

Sasi Sheva is a 44-year-old Israeli from Encino, California, who has worked as a flight attendant at Delta since 2022. He’s now accusing the airline of religious discrimination, claiming the airline “has engaged in a pattern of intentionally discriminating and retaliating against ethnically Jewish, Hebrew and/or Israeli employees based upon their race and ancestry.”

So, what are the flight attendant’s issues with the airline? It started in July 2022, shortly after Sheva’s employment at the airline started, when his schedule was changed at the last minute. Flight attendants need to have flexible scheduled, and it’s not unusual to have trips switched due to operational requirements. Sheva was driven in a van straight to the airport, to avoid any additional delay.

Sheva didn’t have the chance to eat, and the airline ignored his “numerous requests for a ‘safety break’ to obtain a meal.” Sheva is both kosher and vegetarian, so requested that he be able to “stop for a few minutes in the concourse so that he could purchase a vegetarian snack.”

Then despite Sheva’s employee profile “clearly stating he is Hebrew-speaking, Jewish and vegetarian, he was provided with a ham sandwich,” according to the lawsuit.

Next up, in October 2022, Sheva requested to be able to take off Yom Kippur, but that was “refused in bad faith and with no justification.” The airline refused the religious accommodation, noting that Delta uses a seniority system for flight attendant bidding.

A flight attendant is accusing Delta of discrimination

My take on this Delta lawsuit

Even though I’m not particularly religious myself, I respect that people have the right to their sincerely held religious beliefs. That being said, it sure seems to me like these complaints are at odds with the expectations that exist of flight attendants. Let’s unpack these two situations.

Any frequent traveler has been in a situation where a flight is delayed, because you’re short one crew member (I had a very long delay due to this recently, which I still need to write about). Clearly that’s why the flight attendant had his trip changed, was reassigned to another flight, and was brought to the airport ASAP.

Odds are that there were 150-300 people all waiting on Sheva to get to the plane in order to get going. If Sheva had taken 10 minutes to get something to eat (which seems optimistic, given lines at airports), just do the math on how many more collective hours of peoples’ time that would have wasted).

If you’re a frequent traveler, whether you’re a flight attendant or passenger, you should always carry snacks with you, because travel can be unpredictable. That’s even more the case when you have special dietary needs (or in the case of Sheva, two separate sets of dietary requirements).

Presumably the flight had already been catered before Sheva was called to work it, so it’s not like the airline catered a ham sandwich to spite him.

Then there’s the issue of taking Yom Kippur off. For flight attendants, seniority is the single most important factor that determines the schedule one gets. When you get into the airline business, you better be ready to work nights, weekends, holidays, etc.

Short of a serious medical issue for someone in the family, it’s unreasonable to expect that an airline will otherwise accommodate days off based on one’s individual needs. It would be like a Christian asking for Christmas off, since it’s their most important holiday.

For example, for Jewish people who strictly observe Shabbat, it would be unreasonable to expect that the airline would guarantee you that time off every week… at least in my opinion (unless you’re working for EL AL).

Keep in mind that flight attendants are allowed to trade trips, so one workaround for situations like this would be to find a colleague who is willing to pick up a trip for you, in exchange for you picking up one of their trips. But this really has to be done between individuals, rather than expecting accommodation from management.

Look, I don’t want to rag on this Delta flight attendant, and I can appreciate where he’s coming from, wanting to have something decent to eat, and wanting his most important holiday off. But I also feel like maybe being a flight attendant isn’t the right line of work for him, because it requires being willing to work any time, and being extremely flexible.

I mean, both of these incidents started within moments of him taking the job, so maybe he didn’t fully realize what he was getting himself into?

This person might be better off with a different career

Bottom line

A junior flight attendant is suing Delta, accusing the company of a pattern of intentional discrimination. The complaints mainly center around the airline being unwilling to accommodate this person’s dietary and religious needs.

While I understand how the circumstances here might not be ideal, I think this person’s expectations of the airline are unreasonable. One of the most important traits for flight attendants is flexibility, given that the industry operates 24/7, and is all about maintaining a smooth operation.

What’s your take on this situation (please be respectful and stick to the core of the topic)?

Conversations (101)
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  1. Fed UP Guest

    Sick of these religious zealots OF ALL STRIPES.

    Too bad. We need to have a secular workplace, and stop catering to every "religion" in the world..... (it's akin to the "service animals" that were pythons, giraffes and aardvarks). Because there are endless "real" religions (they are all fake) and then the totally made up religions that people imagine in their heads.

    If you want to live in a place where Religion and State are one,...

    Sick of these religious zealots OF ALL STRIPES.

    Too bad. We need to have a secular workplace, and stop catering to every "religion" in the world..... (it's akin to the "service animals" that were pythons, giraffes and aardvarks). Because there are endless "real" religions (they are all fake) and then the totally made up religions that people imagine in their heads.

    If you want to live in a place where Religion and State are one, then you can move to those counties like that (Israel, Saudi Arabia, The Vatican, etc).

    Get RID of this guy, can you imagine being on a flight with him ?

    I can't serve a breakfast that has sausage on it, I can serve a meal to a single woman, I can't to anything, because if is now the Sabath on Israel Standard Time, even though I am in Detroit.

    btw, all of these zealots are the same.

  2. Bill W Guest

    Oh cater to me, I'm special! Did he file the lawsuit via Twitter?

  3. Pari Passu Guest

    TBH, he should transfer to ACS and find a shift (or trades) that let him observe Shabbat.

    1. UncleRonnie Diamond

      I suspect he’s a moaner and unpopular, so finds trades a little hard to secure.

  4. dee Guest

    He needs a different career move..asap!!I am sure he will get some compensation for all of his fake complaints but he should in reality get ZIP!

  5. Eskimo Guest

    And people still don't understand why so many others have strong opinions on Israel.

    If my religion is the Church of three headed Koala and my faith forbids me to work outside of Monday afternoon and I must be spoon fed caviar and champagne by 2 non believers twice a week and must pray in a bed with my eyes closed every 3 hours 3 times a day. The louder snore the holier. My faith...

    And people still don't understand why so many others have strong opinions on Israel.

    If my religion is the Church of three headed Koala and my faith forbids me to work outside of Monday afternoon and I must be spoon fed caviar and champagne by 2 non believers twice a week and must pray in a bed with my eyes closed every 3 hours 3 times a day. The louder snore the holier. My faith doesn't have a holiest day, we have a holiest decade. Our holiest holiday, the Koala Pickleball festival, spans 10 years and comes once every 10 years.

    Should I file a lawsuit for antikoalism?

    2 more replies
  6. DCharlie Guest

    Americans are the carriers of the cross … they have vowed to fight the infidels and lead the next crusade. Hardly a surprise that the idea of other religions aces m vegetarianism fails to register in their brains. Other than Islamic countries and Israel, I don’t think any other country identifies so strongly with a religion as America….

  7. KW Guest

    Surprised that the Delta KHaren didn't try to blame KHamas.

  8. Po Guest

    Airline polices are fairly clear and robust having withstood a number of governmental and legal challenges. Most airlines require you to sign a form indicating you can legally travel to any country (FAs) and work any shifts including weekends and holidays - NO EXCEPTIONS (gate/ramp staff). Many do accommodate religious practice such as praying during break times or head coverings. In addition, your dietary requirements are your own. As a FA you signed the form...

    Airline polices are fairly clear and robust having withstood a number of governmental and legal challenges. Most airlines require you to sign a form indicating you can legally travel to any country (FAs) and work any shifts including weekends and holidays - NO EXCEPTIONS (gate/ramp staff). Many do accommodate religious practice such as praying during break times or head coverings. In addition, your dietary requirements are your own. As a FA you signed the form indicating you could work hot reserve, short call, long call, etc. So, you can either (1) drop the trip for the event you need, (2) call out, or (3) work in a less restrictive industry. Hospital employees, first responders (thankfully!) work under similar constraints. Transfer to reservations or recruitment where you can work from home. Operational staffing is not for everyone. We should be grateful for the individuals that are willing to sacrifice holidays and events so that we can enjoy them with family and friends.

  9. yp Guest

    Religion is like genitals, we all got one and fine to be proud of. Don't whip it out in public!

    Courtesy - Intenet!

  10. digital_notmad Diamond

    the most persuasive comments in this thread have been the ones in ostensibly support of the FA, albeit persuasive in the opposite direction than they were intended. good grief, the hilarious entitlement of some folks...

  11. TL Guest

    As someone who would die if he ate a peanut, fake sky daddy rules don't really get my sympathy re: dietary choices. Because that is a choice at that point.

    1. Moe Guest

      As a parent whose child had to fly in underwear, I would suggest you take precautions or don't fly. We boarded a flight and I gave my child peanut based candy. Only then did they announce a person onboard was allergic. JetBlue cabin crew, in contact with their medical authorities decided to bag my son's clothing. He was also wiped down with alcohol wipes. We asked the cabin crew to keep the allergic passenger away...

      As a parent whose child had to fly in underwear, I would suggest you take precautions or don't fly. We boarded a flight and I gave my child peanut based candy. Only then did they announce a person onboard was allergic. JetBlue cabin crew, in contact with their medical authorities decided to bag my son's clothing. He was also wiped down with alcohol wipes. We asked the cabin crew to keep the allergic passenger away during deplaning due to risk but at that point the allergy story was no longer real so they laughed as they passed us.

  12. jeeper28 New Member

    Ben your on point, it would be ridiculous to expect accommodation on this, no way, no how.

  13. Robert Guest

    I am a retired pilot and I know a thing or two about reassignments. If a flight is waiting for you and you need to duck into a fast food emporium for a few minutes, no one is going to discipline you for that. You may have to explain to your supervisor but no one can expect you to work a trip with no food.

    1. Eskimo Guest

      WOW!!!
      I wish passengers can offload crews.

      If a passenger "duck into a fast food emporium for a few minutes" you're off the flight.

      Flight 55 is delayed due to Pilot waiting on a Whopper.

      911: we can't dispatch anyone right now, our officers need to grab some coffee.

  14. Gary Breen Guest

    Ben your on point, period

  15. Charles Guest

    As a son of Holocaust survivors (and a relative of many who did not survive), and the parent of a Jewish student at Columbia, I assess this lawsuit as the sort of rubbish that mocks those who have actually suffered for their religion. Complete nonsense.

  16. Patricia Mclelland Guest

    This smacks ofgenerator. (or genz or whatever) sense of entitlement, pervasive in the younger generation. Everything has to be on their terms.

  17. Shlomo Shekelbergstein Guest

    It’s anudda shoah!

    1. Moe Guest

      Been around a lot. Your comment enticed me to look at your name. While an impressive pun, your comment is clearly anti-Jew with the mention of money.

  18. Robert Fahr Guest

    Smart passengers have contingency plans on our person or carry on for food. It makes a flight attendant look foolish to not do the same.

    1. Moe Guest

      I am not taking sides but reread the story. He was called in with no notice and a van was waiting. I have contingency plans when I know I am travelling.

  19. FlyerDon Guest

    Just do what most airline employees do when they really need a particular day off, call in sick.

  20. BradStPete Guest

    I mean what airline caters pork products anymore….. a ham sandwich? Yeah no
    I call BS and I absolutely agree with Ben. I flew for 3 years ( Pan Am years ago) wouldn’t have dreamed of asking for Christmas off !

    1. KennyT Member

      You call BS? Besides Delta, United, Lufthansa, Asiana, BA, and plenty of others serve ham sandwiches. Google is your friend.

  21. TheTruthIs Guest

    I don't believe in any religious exemptions, especially in hospitality and emergency personnel positions. I believe in seniority.

  22. SHEVA Guest

    "Sasi Sheva" ? Did this person just converted from Hinduism to Judaism? ( If I am not wrong they call the Indians as Brown Jews of Asia).

  23. We own the Legal system Guest

    Yes, I am " SPECIAL" because I am Jewish! Oh, By the way, If I don't get my way, I am sending Booby trapped pagers, cell phones and I-Phones to adults, children, old ladies, I don't care who. Also I will sue in US Courts so they will rule in my favor and US will confiscate " Other" countries Deposits & property because we have "OUR" people posted there.( Treasury Dept is strictly a Hebrew entity)

    3 more replies
  24. John Guest

    Flight attendants bid monthly for their schedules.
    If it was so important to have that day off he could have bid it off or traded with someone.

    1 more reply
  25. raylan Guest

    What an inconceivably whiney lawsuit. Seems like a lot more instances these days of the very religious wanting preferential treatment, and not equal rights, meaning those of us who are not religious become second class citizens by default. If a religious holiday is so important, use paid time off or trade shifts; if you have exceptionally niche dietary restrictions, that's a you problem and not a your employer problem.

    While those who are religious...

    What an inconceivably whiney lawsuit. Seems like a lot more instances these days of the very religious wanting preferential treatment, and not equal rights, meaning those of us who are not religious become second class citizens by default. If a religious holiday is so important, use paid time off or trade shifts; if you have exceptionally niche dietary restrictions, that's a you problem and not a your employer problem.

    While those who are religious would scoff at this, religion is ultimately a personal choice and following doctrines and dogma amount to a personal choice. It would not be materially different than me deciding I don't want to work on my birthday and that I can't eat iceberg lettuce because I think it sucks and then expecting my employer to accommodate those choices under threat of law. Personal choices.

  26. JetSetFly Guest

    Sounds like Mr Sheva is in the wrong line of work. He needs a desk job instead where he can easily bring his own food to work. As for needing religious days off. I’m sure if he gives his supervisor a year notice in advance, unless emergency pops up, can be easily arranged if he has a regular office job. If office job isn’t for him, I would suggest be a real estate agent where...

    Sounds like Mr Sheva is in the wrong line of work. He needs a desk job instead where he can easily bring his own food to work. As for needing religious days off. I’m sure if he gives his supervisor a year notice in advance, unless emergency pops up, can be easily arranged if he has a regular office job. If office job isn’t for him, I would suggest be a real estate agent where you set your own schedule. With that said, I feel sorry for his future employers as this guy feels like a handful.

  27. Andrew Guest

    With you on the food situation but I don’t see why the attendant can’t take off Yom Kippur with plenty of advance notice. It’s the most holiest Jewish holiday and it’s one day.

    4 more replies
  28. Maryland Guest

    During recruitment airlines are very clear about the work scheduling but perhaps applicants in their enthusiasm, develope a selective hearing loss. Too bad. I've often thought new hires should be partially responsible for the training costs if the employees cannot abide the terms to which was agreed.

    1. JC Guest

      Yeah. Same same as working in call centers. Recruitment specifically asks applicants if they are willing to work on holidays and shifting schedules, all say yes. But when they are in production, they become whiny B*****s if they have a shift on Christmas.

  29. Samo Guest

    Treating you like everyone else is not a discrimination, even if you dislike that treatment.

  30. globetrotter Guest

    Religion is a personal choice that belongs in private domain and plays no role on public policies. An employee who needs a special accommodation must arrange it with his co-worker at management's discretion. When a business allows special exemption or accommodation, it will invite abuse and fraud. Secular Israelis fight against Orthodox Jews when they demand the government to exempt their kids from compulsory military service so that they can focus on Judaism practice. Secular...

    Religion is a personal choice that belongs in private domain and plays no role on public policies. An employee who needs a special accommodation must arrange it with his co-worker at management's discretion. When a business allows special exemption or accommodation, it will invite abuse and fraud. Secular Israelis fight against Orthodox Jews when they demand the government to exempt their kids from compulsory military service so that they can focus on Judaism practice. Secular Israelis have a couple of kids while Orthodox Jews have six or more kids. It is unsustainable to provide long-term safety and security to the nation. Why don't we hear or read about other faith followers demand the same accommodation from their employers? It matters not how special the religious day is.

    1 more reply
  31. DerekH Guest

    This is all very confusing...

    1. As I understand it, flight attendants operate in very chaotic and subject to change schedules. It should be an expectation that you need to be flexible across a number of aspects of your daily life
    2. Why is he not using a PTO day for the holiday? Are flight attendants forced to work in some sort of slave labor practice?
    3. Not seeing how this is antisemitic...

    This is all very confusing...

    1. As I understand it, flight attendants operate in very chaotic and subject to change schedules. It should be an expectation that you need to be flexible across a number of aspects of your daily life
    2. Why is he not using a PTO day for the holiday? Are flight attendants forced to work in some sort of slave labor practice?
    3. Not seeing how this is antisemitic and in fact belittles others who genuinely are dealing with antisemitism.

    All of this sounds ridiculous.

    I know Jewish co-workers who have refused jobs due to possibly needing to work on Saturdays/be on-call, just as I've known Muslim co-workers who couldn't work at fast-food establishments growing up since they would be serving pork and had to find other student jobs during the summers.

    This guy has no excuse--go find another job that fits with your religion and lifestyle, stop crying wolf.

  32. 9volt Diamond

    No sane court would even give this case the time of day. This will case will surely be dismissed and rightfully so.

  33. Robert R Member

    I am a retired flight attendant and I'm also Jewish. I can appreciate most of the comments that have been posted. This individual had many different options to ensure he was not working during Yom Kippur. Trip trade, drop the trip, and certainly his yearly vacation time. Not sure how much vacation time he had the first year, but he also had plenty of time and notice to get a coworker to accommodate his needs....

    I am a retired flight attendant and I'm also Jewish. I can appreciate most of the comments that have been posted. This individual had many different options to ensure he was not working during Yom Kippur. Trip trade, drop the trip, and certainly his yearly vacation time. Not sure how much vacation time he had the first year, but he also had plenty of time and notice to get a coworker to accommodate his needs. However, nobody has addressed the possibility if he was on reserve. If that was the case, then his scheduling flexibility would be greatly diminished. I know in my 25 years in the industry, I never had an issue to get time off for any personal event, religious holiday, or anything else that I was interested in attending. It is my belief that this person only relied on the company agreeing to his needs, and we all know that it doesn't work that way.

    Why did he have to file a lawsuit? I speculate that it might be to preempt some sort of disciplinary action. As he does not have any union protection at DL.

    Regarding the ham sandwich. This is on him 100%. He was probably sitting reserve and was on a short call out. There was no opportunity for the company to replenish crew meals based upon anyones dietary needs. He should always have a snack bag/care package ready to go at anytime. This is just lack of experience or ignorance on his part.

  34. Blake obrian Guest

    This is not el al. This is delta an american airline not israeli airline. Absolutely ridiculous lawsuit.

  35. Richard Guest

    Comparing Yom Kippur to Christmas has got to be one of the most offensively ignorant comments I have seen in a long time.
    Do some research Ben.
    Also, every employee has the right to a meal. If they have certain dietary requirements, they have a right to take a break to deal with those requirements. These are basic workers rights, regardless of how many people might be inconvenienced in the meantime.

    10 more replies
  36. BC Guest

    This is not going to get anywhere. I can get behind the ham sandwich story but as scheduling is concerned, it’s seniority based.

    Imagine everyone who wants Christmas off not getting it and suing? Right.

  37. Creditcrunch Diamond

    Just another money grabbing individual taking advantage of the current anti Jewish rhetoric who clearly wanted to find a financial exit from a job he didn’t really enjoy!

    3 more replies
  38. uldguy Diamond

    Go ahead and sue. The line forms to the right. And, good luck with that! (Tongue firmly in cheek)

  39. Watson Diamond

    Sounds like flight attendant isn't the right line of work for this guy.

    I've never had any sympathy for people's self-inflicted rules, religious or not. Don't expect other people to accommodate your choices.

  40. John Smith Guest

    In 1985, Sol Wachtler, then the chief justice of New York's Supreme Court said, “Any good prosecutor can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich.”

    1. TheTruthIs Guest

      But did he keep the evidence?

  41. Christian Guest

    Ethnically Jewish? What is that? I’ve never subscribed to the crazed ideology that equates a religion with a race.

    5 more replies
  42. Fordamist Guest

    don't shoot me, I'm just the piano player ... FYI, the current US Supreme Court offers a kinda-standard that employers will have to go beyond to try to avoid another lawsuit: prior standard was a TWA case: Groff in '23 tried to explain the prior, but it's still subjective: "a religious accommodation must impose a substantial hardship to the conduct of the employer’s business – analyzing the reasonableness of the accommodation through the lens of...

    don't shoot me, I'm just the piano player ... FYI, the current US Supreme Court offers a kinda-standard that employers will have to go beyond to try to avoid another lawsuit: prior standard was a TWA case: Groff in '23 tried to explain the prior, but it's still subjective: "a religious accommodation must impose a substantial hardship to the conduct of the employer’s business – analyzing the reasonableness of the accommodation through the lens of employer size and resources – before it can be denied. This requires evaluating the particular accommodation(s) requested and their practical impact in light of the nature, size and operating cost of an employer." Surprisingly, vote was 9-0. All 9 agreed with it. Employer was the US Postal Service.

  43. Grogg Member

    A Jew asking not to work on Yom Kippur is a very reasonable request. Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is the holiest day on the Jewish calendar and it is traditional for Jews to go to Synagogue and also to fast. I don't see why it is difficult for Delta to accommodate the request. While I appreciate the concern about treating employees consistently across religions and allowing any Christian to take off Christmas would...

    A Jew asking not to work on Yom Kippur is a very reasonable request. Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is the holiest day on the Jewish calendar and it is traditional for Jews to go to Synagogue and also to fast. I don't see why it is difficult for Delta to accommodate the request. While I appreciate the concern about treating employees consistently across religions and allowing any Christian to take off Christmas would be problematic for the airline's operations, allowing Jews to take off Yom Kippur doesn't pose a similar problem.

    8 more replies
  44. George Romey Guest

    His days as a flight attendant are thankfully probably limited.

  45. yiannis93117 Guest

    Well isn't this dude special! Get to work, on the days you're supposed to work! With two years seniority only? Good luck in the future, i suspect you won't be working for DL very long.

    1. John Smith Guest

      I guess he's asking to work the entire Thanksgiving rush, Travel week of Christmas, 4th of July, every 3 day weekend, plus New Years Eve, New Years Day, and Easter - maybe he'll see a shadow. Why not.

  46. Nelson Diamond

    ZERO respect! When I fly a muslim Carrier I can't have porc or alcohol on some Airlines, so get a life or a business that fits you! He should be sued by the Carrier for delaying it.

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Robert R Member

I am a retired flight attendant and I'm also Jewish. I can appreciate most of the comments that have been posted. This individual had many different options to ensure he was not working during Yom Kippur. Trip trade, drop the trip, and certainly his yearly vacation time. Not sure how much vacation time he had the first year, but he also had plenty of time and notice to get a coworker to accommodate his needs. However, nobody has addressed the possibility if he was on reserve. If that was the case, then his scheduling flexibility would be greatly diminished. I know in my 25 years in the industry, I never had an issue to get time off for any personal event, religious holiday, or anything else that I was interested in attending. It is my belief that this person only relied on the company agreeing to his needs, and we all know that it doesn't work that way. Why did he have to file a lawsuit? I speculate that it might be to preempt some sort of disciplinary action. As he does not have any union protection at DL. Regarding the ham sandwich. This is on him 100%. He was probably sitting reserve and was on a short call out. There was no opportunity for the company to replenish crew meals based upon anyones dietary needs. He should always have a snack bag/care package ready to go at anytime. This is just lack of experience or ignorance on his part.

6
Watson Diamond

Sounds like flight attendant isn't the right line of work for this guy. I've never had any sympathy for people's self-inflicted rules, religious or not. Don't expect other people to accommodate your choices.

6
George Romey Guest

His days as a flight attendant are thankfully probably limited.

6
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