DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 474 KB)
Asking a Gentile to Turn off One's Car Lights on Shabbat; Asking a Gentile to Shovel Snow on Shabbat

If a person forgot to switch off his car lights before Shabbat, may he ask a gentile to turn off the lights?

Rav Shemuel Pinchasi ruled that the Halacha in such a case depends on the potential consequences of leaving the lights turned on throughout Shabbat. If the lights would drain the battery completely and cause the person considerable inconvenience, such as by having it towed to a garage, then he may ask a gentile to switch off the lights to spare him this inconvenience. If, however, leaving the lights on would only weaken the battery, but not drain it completely, such that no particular inconvenience would result, then one should not ask a gentile to switch off the lights.

If it snowed during Shabbat, may one ask a gentile to shovel the snow in front of his home?

Rav Pinchasi ruled that one may ask a gentile to remove the snow from in front of his home on Shabbat, due to (among other reasons) the potential danger the presence of snow and ice causes to pedestrians. There is even greater room for leniency, he adds, in locales where fines are imposed upon homeowners who do not remove the snow from the sidewalk near their homes. Preferably, however, one should ask the gentile not to throw the snow a distance of four Amot (6-8 feet) at any one time; he should instead try to move each shovel-full of snow a shorter distance away from the sidewalk.

This is the position taken as well in the work "Mishneh Halachot" (vol. 4, chapter 45).

Summary: If a person forgot to switch off his car lights before Shabbat, and leaving the lights on throughout Shabbat would cause him considerable inconvenience, he may ask a gentile to switch off the lights. If snow fell on Shabbat, it is permissible to ask a gentile to remove the snow from the sidewalk in front of one's home.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Newspaper Delivery on Shabbat
The Status of Food Suitable Only for Animal Consumption With Respect to Muktzeh
If a Non-Jew Did Not Return a Rented Animal Before Shabbat
Renting Utensils to a Non-Jew before Shabbat
Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Bring Something From One's Car
Eating After Sundown on Shabbat if One Began Se'uda Shelishit Before Sundown
Handling Mail Received on Shabbat
The Significance of the Word "Shabbat"
Ereb Shabbat: Haircutting, Nail Cutting, Bathing, and Immersing in a Mikveh
Cutting Vegetables for a Salad on Shabbat
Sitting or Leaning on a Car on Shabbat
Wearing a Handkerchief in a Public Domain on Shabbat
Is it permissible to use diapers with adhesive strips on Shabbat?
Home Construction on Shabbat
Hiring a Non-Jew to Perform a Task Which Might be Done on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found