DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 834 KB)
May One Take a Pebble from the Western Wall as a Souvenir?

Halacha forbids deriving personal benefit from any of the sacred articles of the Bet Ha'mikdash, and from the Bet Ha'mikdash itself, due to their unique status of sanctity. For this reason, the Rambam writes (Hilchot Me'ila 8:3) that the formal Halachic status of Kedusha (sanctity) was conferred upon the Temple only after its construction was completed. Had the materials been endowed with Halachic sanctity already from the outset, then the builders would have transgressed the prohibition of Me'ila – deriving personal benefit from sacred property – during the building process, when they would use the walls for shelter from the sun or rain.

Does this prohibition apply nowadays to the Western Wall in Jerusalem, which is part of the wall that surrounds the Temple Mount? Is it permissible for a visitor to take a pebble from one of the cracks in the Wall as a souvenir, or does this violate the prohibition of Me'ila?

Rabbi Moshe Feinstein (Russia-New York, 1895-1986) addresses this question in his Iggerot Moshe (Y.D. 4:63), and he writes unequivocally that one may not derive any personal benefit from the stones of the Western Wall, as doing so transgresses the prohibition of Me'ila. He argues that the sanctity of the Temple extends even to the wall surrounding the Temple Mount, and thus the Western Wall, like the Temple itself, is subject to the Me'ila prohibition. Even after the Temple's destruction, the Western Wall's special status of Kedusha remains, as the Rabbis comment, "The Shechina [Divine Presence] never departed from the Western Wall." Therefore, it remains subject to the law of Me'ila even in the absence of a Temple.

Rabbi Feinstein adds that one who takes a pebble from the Western Wall violates another prohibition, as well, that of "Lo Ta'asun Kein Le'Hashem Elokeichem" (Devarim 12:4), which forbids destroying sacred articles. The Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Poland, 1525-1572), in his glosses to the Shulchan Aruch (O.C. 152), applies this prohibition even to the destruction of a synagogue; he rules that it is forbidden to destroy a synagogue except for the purpose of building another one in its place. By the same token, Rabbi Feinstein writes, it would be forbidden to take even a small pebble from the Western Wall, and this amounts to "dismantling" the sacred wall surrounding the Temple Mount.

Thus, one may not take a pebble from the Western Wall, due to both the prohibition of Me'ila and the law forbidding any kind of dismantling of sacred articles.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Wearing the Shoes of a Deceased Person; Sleeping with Shoes; Wearing Shoes on the Wrong Feet
Hanging Flags in the Synagogue
The Parochet – The Curtain Outside the Aron
Birkat Ha’hama: One Who Sees the Sun Through Eyeglasses, or Who Sees Only a Reflection; Looking at Someone Named Abraham While Reciting the Beracha
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Indoors and in an Airplane; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama During Mourning
Training Children to Recite Birkat Ha’hama; Customs for After Birkat Ha’hama
Should Women Recite Birkat Ha’hama?
Reciting She’heheyanu Over Birkat Ha’hama
If a Berit Mila is Performed on the Day of Birkat Ha’hama; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Birkat Ha’ilanot
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Shaharit
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama on a Cloudy Day
Eating Before Reciting Birkat Ha’hama
Birkat Ha’hama- I
How Early in the Month May One Recite Birkat Halebana?
Respecting Parents-in-Law
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found