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: 442 KB)
Passover- Searching for Hametz in the Synagogue

On the night of the 14th of Nissan (meaning, the night before Erev Pesach), we conduct Bedikat Hametz – the search for Hametz in our homes by candlelight, as the first Mishna in Masechet Pesachim requires.

The Shulchan Aruch explicitly rules that a search must be performed also in the Batei Kenesset (synagogues) and Batei Midrash (study halls), since children would often bring food into these places. This would certainly apply nowadays, as well, when many synagogues host meals or celebrations on various occasions (Shabbat, Rosh Chodesh, etc.). Every community thus bears an obligation to see to it that Bedikat Hametz is conducted in the synagogue on the night of the 14th of Nissan by candlelight; this is generally the responsibility of the Shamash (synagogue attendant) or the Rabbi. The one performing the Bedika in the synagogue first conducts the search in his home. When he recites the Beracha before beginning the search in his home, he should have in mind that the Beracha applies also to his subsequent search in the synagogue. After concluding his search in his home, he then goes the synagogue and conducts the Bedika without reciting a Beracha.

The Peri Chadash (Rabbi Chizkiya De Silva, Italy, 1659-1698) bemoaned the fact that many communities were negligent with regard to this obligation, and would have the synagogue either checked for Hametz on the morning of Erev Pesach, or just cleaned a few days before Pesach, without ever undergoing a formal Bedika. Communities must ensure that a proper, formal Bedikat Hametz be conducted in the synagogue, just as a Bedika is performed in one's home.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Affixing Mezuzot in a Short-Term Rental
Wearing the Tefillin Shel Rosh Over a Toupee
The Definition of "Left-handed" for Purposes of Tefillin
Tefillin – Looking at the Tefillin Shel Rosh Before Placing It on the Head; When to Remove the Tefillin Shel Rosh From Its Bag; The Earliest Time for Tefillin
If a Person Mistakenly Removed His Tallit From its Bag Before the Tefillin
Does One Wear Tefillin Shel Yad if His Arm is in a Cast?
Must One Wear Specifically a Woolen Tallit Katan?
The Proper Position of a Mezuza on the Doorpost
The Beracha of Yoser Or – Touching the Tefillin, and Punctuating the Phrase, “Be’safa Berura U’bi’n’ima Kedusha”
The Leather Used for the Parchment Inside the Tefillin and the Tefillin Boxes
Elul - Wishing “Le’Shana Toba” in Written Correspondence, Checking Tefillin and Mezuzot
Speaking, Answering “Amen” and Gesturing While Putting On Tefillin
Using a Mirror to Check the Placement of One’s Tefillin
The Importance of the Misva of Tefillin
One Who Mistakenly Recited “Barech Alenu” in the Amida Instead of “Barechenu”
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found