DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is Me'tziat Zivug
 Shulamit bat Devora, Tzipporah bat Esther, Yael bat Penina, Yaffa bat Shoshana
"May H-shem send the proper ben-zug to each of you, with clarity and ease. May you each merit to build a Bayit ne'eman be Yisrael this year."

Dedicated By
anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 652 KB)
In The Event One Forgot To Make Eruv Tavshilin, But Remembered While In Shul Right Before Yom Tov Began

When Yom Tov falls before Shabbat, one is required to prepare an Eruv Tavshilin before Yom Tov to allow him to cook on Yom Tov for Shabbat. If one came to the synagogue before Yom Tov and remembered that he had not prepared the Eruv Tavshilin, what options does he have so that he can be allowed to cook on Yom Tov for Shabbat?

If sufficient time remains before the onset of Yom Tov for him to return home and prepare the Eruv Tavshilin, he must certainly do so. But if one does not have enough time to return home, may he designate in the synagogue food that he has in his house as the Eruv Tavshilin? For example, if he knows that he has a boiled egg in his refrigerator and a loaf of bread in his pantry, can he designate them as his Eruv Tavshilin even though he is in the synagogue, and the foods are elsewhere?

The Chid"a (Rav Chayim Yosef David Azulai, Israel, 1724-1806), in his work of responsa Chayim Sha'al (1:9), addresses this question and rules that one cannot designate food that is not in front of him as an Eruv Tavshilin. Therefore, if the individual cannot return home in time before the onset of Yom Tov, he does not have the option of preparing the Eruv Tavshilin in the synagogue.

By contrast, Chacham Bentzion Abba Shaul (Or Le'tziyon, vol. 3, 22:7) and Chacham Ovadia Yosef (cited in Yalkut Yosef, vol. 5, p. 499) rule, however, that under extenuating circumstances one may, in fact, prepare an Eruv Tavshilin with food that is not in front of him. Therefore, if the person cannot return home in time to prepare the Eruv Tavshilin there, he may do so in the synagogue, having in mind the specific foods he designates as the Eruv. In such a case, though, one does not recite the Beracha "Al Mitzvat Eruv," and he must also omit the first two words of the standard text used for designating an Eruv Tavshilin – "Be'dein Eruva" being that the Eruv is not in front of him.

Summary: If one remembers after coming to the synagogue before Yom Tov that he had not prepared an Eruv Tavshilin, he must return home to prepare the Eruv. If there is not enough time remaining before Yom Tov to return home, then he may rely on those views allowing one to designate foods as an Eruv Tavshilin even if they are in a different location. In this case he omits the Beracha as well as the words "Be'dein Eruva."

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Does Someone Count for a Minyan If He is in a Different Room?
Is There an Obligation to Live in Eretz Yisrael?
May a Woman Return Home From the Hospital on Shabbat After a “False Alarm”?
Revoking Rabbinic Edicts of Past Generations
Accompanying a Woman in Labor to the Hospital on Shabbat
May a Husband be Present During His Wife’s Labor and Delivery?
May Expectant Parents Find Out the Fetus’ Gender?
Is it Permissible to Pray for the Death of a Terminally Ill Patient Who is Suffering?
Using the Mother’s Name When Praying for a Sick Patient
“Opening One’s Mouth to the Satan”
Does One Recite Tefilat Ha’derech Before a Short Flight?
Customs to Observe After Experiencing a Miracle
The Beracha Recited Upon Entering a Cemetery
The Completion of the 13th Daf Yomi Cycle
May a Synagogue Have a Menorah With Seven Branches?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found