DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 420 KB)
Determining the Yartzeit of Somebody Who Passed Away During Adar Rishon

A leap year in the Jewish calendar is a year containing two months of Adar, to which we refer as "Adar Rishon" ("the first Adar") and "Adar Sheni" ("the second Adar").

If a person passes away, Heaven forbid, during the month of Adar Rishon in a leap year, then his Yartzeit (anniversary of his death) is observed on non-leap years on the corresponding day in the month of Adar. The exception to this rule, as Rav David Yosef (son of Hacham Ovadia Yosef) writes in his work Torat Ha'mo'adim (laws of Adar, p. 19), is when the individual passed away on the thirtieth day of Adar Rishon. The thirtieth of Adar Rishon is observed as the first day of Rosh Hodesh Adar Sheni, and therefore on non-leap years, the Yartzeit is likewise observed on the first day of Rosh Hodesh Adar – the thirtieth of Shevat. Even though the person died on the thirtieth of Adar Rishon, in determining the Yartzeit we focus on this day's status as the first day of Rosh Hodesh Adar Sheni, and thus the Yartzeit will be observed on the thirtieth day of Shevat, or the first day of Rosh Hodesh Adar.

Of course, this applies only on non-leap years. On leap years, the family members will observe the Yartzeit on the actual date on which the individual passed away – the thirtieth of Adar Rishon.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is There a Requirement Nowadays to Give Portions of a Slaughtered Animal to a Kohen?
Showing Respect to a Kohen
Lighting a Candle in Memory of the Deceased
Reciting She’hehiyanu Upon Seeing a Friend or Loved One for the First Time in 30 Days
Can a Minor be Counted as the Tenth Person for a Minyan?
Saying the Name of a City That is Named After a Pagan Deity
Does One Recite a Beracha When Seeing the President of the United States?
The Disqualification of a Kohen Who Accidentally Kills
Reciting Tikkun Hasot in the Afternoon During the Three Weeks, and Every Night
Sources of the Concept of Gematria
Does a Minor Recite Birkat Ha’gomel?
Praying at the Graves of the Righteous
The Prohibition Against Taking A Short Cut Through a Synagogue
Eating a Special Meal on Rosh Hodesh
Reciting “Va’ani Tefilati” and “Mizmor Shir” When Praying Minha Privately on Shabbat Afternoon
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found