DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Katrielah bat Bella Malka
"Please pray that Hashem grant her a speedy refuah shlema."

Dedicated By
Sara and Ely Levy

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 950 KB)
Yom Kippur- The Rules Of Fasting for Minors

At what age should children begin fasting on Yom Kippur, for either part of the day or the entire day?

Chacham Ovadia Yosef addresses this issue at great length in Chazon Ovadia (Yamim Nora'im, p. 330), and he rules that children younger than nine years of age should not be forced or even allowed to fast for any part of the day. Even on the night of Yom Kippur, when they return from the synagogue, children are allowed to eat and drink as usual. Chacham Ovadia very adamantly insists that parents feed these children and have them drink as they normally would, as even several hours of fasting could potentially endanger their health.

Once a child reaches the age of nine, parents should begin training them to observe "Ta'anit Sha'ot," meaning, to fast for a brief period of the day. If, for example, a child normally eats breakfast at 8 A.M., the parents should feed him one hour or so later (and he should not eat or drink on the night of Yom Kippur). Parents must ensure that the child eats properly during the day. If children attend the synagogue services on Yom Kippur, which generally end only at around 1 or 2 o'clock in the afternoon, parents are required to either send the children home to eat or have food for them in the synagogue so that they are properly fed. In fact, Rabbi Chayim Palachi (Turkey, 19th century) would make an announcement in his synagogue before Torah reading on Yom Kippur reminding parents to feed their children, lest the children go unfed until the afternoon hours.

Chacham Ovadia Yosef also emphasizes that this applies only to healthy children. If a child has any sort of medical condition or is feeling ill or frail, he must be given adequate food and drink on his usual schedule, and should not be allowed to fast at all.

Within a year of a child's Bar/Bat-Mitzva, meaning, at the age of eleven for girls and twelve for boys, the child should fast until Chatzot (midday as defined by Halacha; the time appears on most Halachic calendars). Chacham Ovadia Yosef rules that given the frailty of today's children they should not be allowed to observe a full day of fasting until the age of Bar/Bat-Mitzva. Therefore, eleven-year-old girls and twelve-year-old boys should fast only until Chatzot and no later.

Summary: Children under the age of nine must be fed and given drinks according to their normal schedule on Yom Kippur; it is forbidden for parents to allow children of this age to fast for even a brief period. From the age of nine, healthy children should be fed an hour or so later than their usual mealtime, and parents must ensure not to withhold food or drink from these children any longer than this period. Sick or weak children at this age should be fed as usual and must not fast for even a brief period. Within a year of a child's Bar/Bat-Mitzva, he/she should fast until Chatzot; a child should not observe a full fast until reaching Bar/Bat-Mitzva.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Can Eliyahu HaNavee Come On Shabbat?
Is It Permissible To Have A Seuda Inside A Bet Kennesset
Is It Permissible To Change Biblical Verses from Singular to Plural Form
Is It Required To Repeat The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit If Removing The Talit For Just A Short While
Is It Required To Make The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit Again If The 1st Talit Was Found To Be Pasul (Improper)
Is One Required To Stand For An Elderly Lady or Scholarly Woman
Is It Permissible To Simply Answer Amen and Rely On Another's Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit
Granting Precedence to a Jew When Hiring
Is It Permissible To Give A Non-Kosher Turkey To A Goy For Their Holiday
Yichud- 1) Must An Onen Follow The Laws of Yichud, 2) War and Yichud
Yichud- Is It Permissible For A Man To Be Alone With A Lady On An Express Elevator In A Skyscraper
Yichud- Is It Permissible to Be Alone with Mother, Father, Daughter, Son, Brother, or Sister
Tzineeut and The Proper and Improper Ways Of Socializing With Friends
How Could We Pray To G-d That Korbanot Be Accepted, When Today We Do Not Have Korbanot?
Some Laws Regarding Visiting or Seeing a Cemetery
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found