DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Alizah Bat Sarah

Dedicated By
Anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 512 KB)
Purim- Meat and Bread at the Seuda

One of the obligations that apply on the festival of Purim is to conduct a Seuda, a festive meal. Strictly speaking, one is not required to eat bread at this meal; nevertheless, it is preferable to include bread, and one should indeed endeavor to eat bread at the Purim meal.

Likewise, it is preferable to eat red meat as part of the Purim Seuda; one who finds it difficult to eat red meat may substitute chicken.

All the laws of Purim, including the obligation to conduct a Seuda, apply equally to men and women. The question thus arises as to whether a woman who is scheduled to immerse in a Mikveh on the night after Purim should eat meat as part of the Purim meal. Generally speaking, a woman should refrain from eating meat on the day before she goes to the Mikveh, out of concern that pieces of meat might become lodged between her teeth, which would invalidate her immersion. Would this apply on Purim, as well, given that it is preferable to eat meat at the Purim meal?

Although the Shevet Halevi (Rabbi Shmuel Wosner, Israel, contemporary) ruled that a woman may, in fact, eat meat as part of the Seudat Purim even though she will go to the Mikveh that night, most other authorities disagree. They argue that since according to many Rabbis there is no strict obligation to eat meat at the Purim Seuda, the preference to eat meat does not override the practice for a woman to refrain from eating meat during the day prior to her immersion.

In summary, one should make an effort to eat bread and red meat with his Purim meal; one who finds it difficult to eat red meat may eat chicken, instead. However, a woman who will be immersing in the Mikveh on the night after Purim should not eat meat on Purim day, even during the Seuda.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Prohibition of Bishul Akum – Eating Foods Prepared by a Gentile
Is It Permissible To Sell UnKosher Food
Dairy Tuna Fish
Is It Permissible To Eat Bread Made By A Non-Jew
The Prohibition of "Bechor Beheima Tehora" – Eating a Firstborn Animal
Is It Permissible To Utilize The Process Of Hagalah To Continuolsy Change Utensils From Meat To Milk To Meat
Sitting with People Eating Dairy Foods, or Preparing Dairy Foods, After One Has Eaten Meat
Is It Permissible To Eat Fish and Meat Together Or Even Have Them On The Same Table
Bloodspots In Eggs
The Many Laws of Eating Milk After Meat
The Many Laws of Eating Meat After Milk
Delivering Kosher Food Through a Non-Jewish Courier
What To Do If An Unkosher Plate Becomes Mixed Up with and Indiscernible Among Kosher Plates
Is It Permissible To Eat Dairy Foods That Were Cooked In A Meat Pot
Feeding Kosher Meat to Animals
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found