DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 712 KB)
If One is Unsure He Ate Enough Qty To Make M'en Shalosh After Eating Both Fruits and Grains

Generally, a person who ate a Ke’zayit (the amount requiring one to recite the Beracha after eating) of Mezonot (grain products other than bread) recites the Beracha of "Al Ha’michya Ve’al Ha’kalkala," and one who ate a Ke’zayit of one of the seven special fruits (such as olives, dates and grapes) recites the Beracha of "Al Ha’etz." If a person ate both a Ke’zayit of grain products and a Ke’zayit of one of the seven fruits, he combines them into a single Beracha: "Al Ha’michya Ve’al Ha’kalkala Ve’al Ha’etz Ve’al Peri Ha’etz."

The question was raised concerning a case where one ate a Ke’zayit of grain products, but cannot ascertain whether the fruit he consumed amounts to a Ke’zayit, and he is therefore unsure whether or not he must include "Ve’al Ha’etz" in his Beracha . Since he must in any event recite "Al Ha’michya," should he mention as well "Ve’al Ha’etz Ve’al Peri Ha’etz" to cover the possibility that he in fact did eat a Ke’zayit of fruit? Or, do we say that according to the possibility that he need not include "Ve’al Ha’etz," mentioning it in his Beracha will constitute a Hefsek – an unlawful interruption in the middle of the Beracha?

Maran (author of the Shulchan Aruch) explicitly addresses this question (in the Orach Chayim section, Siman 208), and writes as follows: "One should not include out of doubt any addition in the Beracha Me’ein Shalosh, even though he does not add Shem U’malchut [the phrase ‘Hashem Elokenu Melech Ha’olam’]." Thus, if one is uncertain whether the addition belongs in the Beracha, he should not include it. In our case, then, the person should recite only "Al Ha’michya Ve’al Ha’kalkala," without adding "Ve’al Ha’etz Ve’al Peri Ha’etz."

The Taz (classic commentary on Shulchan Aruch by Rabbenu David Halevi, 16th-17th century, Poland), however, advances a very novel and interesting reading of this Halacha in the Shulchan Aruch. He understands the Shulchan Aruch as requiring one to avoid this situation, where he is unsure whether or not he must include "Ve’al Ha’etz Ve’al Peri Ha’etz." After the fact, however, if this did occur, then the individual must, according to the Taz, add "Ve’al Ha’etz" given the possibility that he did eat a full Ke’zayit of fruit. The Shulchan Aruch, he claims, meant only that optimally one should not put himself in this problematic situation.

However, this position is held only by the Taz. Hacham Ovadia Yoseph and most Acharonim (authorities after the Shulchan Aruch) disagree, and indeed the straightforward reading of the Shulchan Aruch seems to support their position. Therefore, if a person finds himself in such a predicament, where he must recite "Al Ha’michya" but is unsure whether he must mention as well "Al Ha’etz," he does not include "Al Ha’etz," given the uncertainty as to whether or not it belongs in the Beracha.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
How Many Men Who Have Already Prayed May be Counted For a Minyan to Allow the Repetition of the Amida?
Should One Stand When Reciting “Nishmat Kol Hai” on Shabbat Morning?
Praying & Learning While at Work
Who Receives the First Aliya if There is No Kohen in the Synagogue?
May a Kohen Refuse the First Aliya?
Must One Stop His Learning To Help Complete A Minyan
Lending & Borrowing Tefilin
The Procedure for Taking Three Steps Back After the Amida
Torah Reading – If the Oleh Recites the Wrong Beracha
If A Minyan Becomes Less Than 10 During The Reading of Sefer Torah
The Prohibition Against Leaving the Synagogue During the Torah Reading
Reciting Kaddish After the Torah Reading
Which Daily Prayers Must a Woman Recite?
The Value of Praying Where One Learns, and Praying in the Synagogue
Can Someone be Counted Towards a Minyan if He is Sleeping?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found