DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Esther Tawil Esther bat Kaden

Dedicated By
Her family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 718 KB)
Receiving a Phone Call Made by a Gentile From an Area Where it is Still Shabbat; Making a Phone Call Before or After Shabbat to a Place Where it is Shabbat

Rav Shemuel Pinchasi, in his work on the laws of Shabbat, addresses a number of interesting cases involving telephone calls made from a place where it is not Shabbat to a place where it is Shabbat, and vice versa. We present here a number of important Halachot he discusses in this context. (These Halachot appear as well in the work "Melachim Omenayich.")

If a gentile in the United States makes a phone call on Shabbat afternoon to a Jew in Israel, after Shabbat had already ended in Israel, it is permissible for the Jew to receive the call and speak with the gentile. Since Shabbat had already ended for the Jew, and the call was made on Shabbat by a gentile, answering the call entails no prohibition. By the same token, a Jew in the United States may make a call on Friday afternoon to a gentile in Europe or somewhere else where Shabbat has already begun. Since the Jew makes the call before Shabbat has begun in his area, and he calls a gentile, and not a Jew, no prohibition is involved even though Shabbat has begun in the area to where the call is placed.

Likewise, Rav Pinchasi rules that one may send a fax from the United States on Friday afternoon to Israel, even though Shabbat has already begun in Israel. Conversely, a Jew in Israel may send a fax on Motza'ei Shabbat to the United States, even though Shabbat has yet to end in the U.S. In both these cases, the Jew sends the fax when it is not Shabbat, and thus he does not violate Shabbat even though the fax arrives in an area where Shabbat is observed. Nevertheless, Rav Pinchasi advises that one rely on this leniency only in situations of particular necessity.

Finally, a Jew in Israel who trades stocks in the New York Stock Exchange must instruct his broker not to purchase stocks on his behalf on Friday once Shabbat has begun in Israel. Even though Shabbat has yet to begin in New York, it is forbidden to allow stocks to be purchased on one's behalf during the period he observes as Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Laws of Karpas
Passover- How Much Wine Must One Drink for the Four Cups at the Seder?
Passover- If a Woman Recited "She'hecheyanu" at Candle Lighting, Does She Answer "Amen" to Her Husband's Recitation at Kiddush in the Seder?
Changing To ‘Morid Hatal” on the First Day of Pesach; Conducting a "Se'udat Ester" on the Second Day of Pesach
Passover- Using Specifically "Matza Shemura" at the Seder
Is It Permissible To Do Laundry On Hol HaMoed
Passover- Is It Permissible To Lean, Talk, or Drink During The Seder
Passover- The Third and Fourth Cups of Wine at the Seder
Passover- Is It Permissible For A Girl To Recite A Solo of The Ma Nishtana
Passover- Preparing For The 2nd Seder and Yom Tov Sheni
Passover- Is It Permissible To Drink Milk On Pesach From A Goy Owned Cow Which Consumed Hametz On Pesach
Passover- How Much Flour Is Required For Hallah or Matza
Changing To, and If One Forgets To Recite "Morid Ha'tal"
Passover- If One Mistakenly Used A Hametz Pot On Pesach
Passover- Is It Required To Make Bedikat (Searching For) Hametz in One's Vehicle.wma
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found