DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 938 KB)
Talking and Answering Amen Before Eating But After Making A Beracha Rishona

The Ben Ish Chai (Rabbi Yosef Chayim of Baghdad, 1835-1909), in Parashat Emor, writes that after one recites a Beracha over food, he must not talk until he swallows at least part of the food. Preferably, he adds, one should refrain from speaking until he eats a complete Ke-zayit (volume of an olive). This is, however, but an added measure of stringency. According to the strict Halacha, one must refrain from speaking after reciting a Beracha over food only until he swallows some of the food.

If one spoke before swallowing some of the food, then so long as he had at least placed the food in his mouth before speaking, he need not repeat the Beracha. However, if a person recited a Beracha and spoke before he even put the food in his mouth, he must repeat the Beracha.

If a person recited a Beracha over food and then hears a Beracha or Kaddish, he may answer "Amen" if he had already put the food in his mouth. Even if he has yet to swallow any of the food, and it is thus forbidden for him to speak, an exception is made allowing him to answer "Amen," provided that the food had already entered his mouth. Before one puts the food in his mouth, however, one may not answer "Amen" to a Beracha or Kaddish after reciting a Beracha over food.

The Ben Ish Chai also discusses a case where one recites the Beracha of HaMotzih on behalf of everyone at the table (as is commonly the case at a Shabbat meal), and he incorrectly begins to speak after reciting the Beracha, before partaking of the bread. (In the interest of clarity, we will speak of a situation where a host recited the Beracha on behalf of guests.) The host, as discussed, must then recite a new Beracha before he eats. The question arises as to whether the guests, who are relying on his recitation of the Beracha, must also recite a new Beracha. The Ben Ish Chai rules that if the guests remain silent before partaking of the bread, then they need not recite a new Beracha. Even though the host, who recited the Beracha on their behalf, "lost" the Beracha by speaking before eating, the guests may still rely on his initial recitation and do not require a new Beracha.

A different question arises in the reverse situation, where the host immediately partook of the bread without speaking in the interim, but the guests began speaking before they partook of their pieces of bread. Halacha establishes that if they began speaking only after the host partook of his bread, they need not recite a new Beracha, even though they spoke before eating.

Summary:

1) One who recites a Beracha over food must not speak until he swallows at least part of the food.

2) However, if one hears a Beracha or Kaddish after placing the food in his mouth, he may recite "Amen" even if he has yet to swallow.

3) If one mistakenly spoke before swallowing, but after placing the food in his mouth, he need not repeat the Beracha; but if he spoke after reciting the Beracha before placing the food in his mouth, he must repeat the Beracha.

4) If one person recited the Beracha on behalf of others, as a host generally does at Shabbat meals, the guests need not recite the Beracha if the host speaks before partaking of the bread.

5) If the guests speak before partaking of their pieces of bread, then so long as they began speaking only after the host partook of his piece of bread, they need not recite a new Beracha.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May a Seller Charge a Higher Price if Payment is Delayed?
May a Lender Charge a Penalty for a Delayed Payment of the Debt?
Seizing a Debtor's Property in Lieu of Payment
Defining "Ri’bitt " (Interest)
"Ri’bit": The Prohibition Against Receiving or Paying Interest
Is It Permissible To Poach (Take Away) A Customer
The Halachic Propriety of Opening a Competing Business
Exceptions to the Rule Allowing a Neighbor the Right of First Refusal
Can a Neighbor Exercise His Right of First of Refusal if He Did Not Do So Immediately; a Business Partner's Right of First Refusal
Offering First Right of Refusal to a Partner or Neighbor
Damaging Somebody’s Property for the Purpose of Saving a Life
Is There a Liability When a Child Damages Somebody’s Property?
If One Damages Somebody’s Property In His Sleep, Under Intoxication, While Celebrating, or During a Sports Game
Liability for Damages Caused While Walking or Running in a Public Domain
The Extent of Liability for Property Damages
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found