Imagine losing your sister unexpectedly and being told you might miss her funeral because your job “needs coverage.” That was the heartbreaking dilemma faced by a teenage worker who turned to Reddit for advice. With only one other coworker trained for the role, he asked her to cover a Saturday shift so he could attend the service.
The problem? That coworker never works Saturdays for religious reasons. She refused, the teen pressed again, and soon his manager warned him to stop or face a write-up. What followed was an emotional clash of grief, faith, and workplace responsibility that left readers divided. The original post is below.
A teen’s plea to swap shifts for their sister’s funeral sparked workplace drama when a coworker’s religious beliefs clashed with their grief








OP edited the post to answer some questions:

OP provided an update:










Workplace tragedies expose just how unprepared many managers are to handle human realities. In this case, a teenager grieving the sudden death of his sister was told to “find coverage” rather than being granted bereavement leave. That decision put him in conflict with a coworker whose religious observance made working on Saturdays impossible.
Employment law experts stress that managers, not employees, are responsible for coverage during emergencies.
According to the U.S. Department of Labor, minors and adult workers alike have rights to time off for certain family emergencies, and many states mandate unpaid bereavement leave. Forcing a teenager to negotiate with coworkers instead of offering support was a clear failure of management.
It’s also crucial to understand the religious perspective. As several commenters pointed out, Orthodox Jewish law strictly prohibits work on the Sabbath. It isn’t simply “not wanting to work”, it’s a deeply held commandment.
As Rabbi David Wolpe explains: “Shabbat is not a lifestyle choice but a sacred covenant. Breaking it is not a minor infraction; it’s a violation of identity and belief.” Expecting someone to set that aside, even in a crisis, ignores the seriousness of their faith.
What this story really shows is the danger of pitting grieving employees against each other. The teenager wasn’t wrong for asking; in grief, people plead for anything that might let them say goodbye. The coworker wasn’t wrong for refusing; her boundaries were clear and rooted in religious law. The real breakdown was managerial: a failure to protect both employees from conflict while respecting both grief and religion.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
These Redditors slammed the manager as the real issue, urging the teen to skip work for the funeral and let management handle coverage






This duo called the teen out for pressuring the coworker, emphasizing that the religious boundary wasn’t personal and the boss was at fault



These users stressed that it’s management’s job to solve scheduling conflicts






In the end, the grieving teen did make it to the funeral after his manager relented but only after painful conflict. Reddit’s verdict was clear: the coworker wasn’t to blame, and neither was the teen. The real fault lay with management for ignoring basic compassion in a time of loss.
Would you have pushed your coworker in his shoes, or walked away after one “no”? And should managers be held legally accountable for mishandling situations like this? Share your thoughts below.









