DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 874 KB)
Birkat Ha'ilanot- Reciting Birkat Ha'ilanot Over the Same Person's Tree Each Year

** Go to www.dailyhalacha.com to have Rabbi Mansour sell your Hames for Pesah. **

There is an obligation to recite each year during the month of Nissan "Birkat Ha'ilanot," a Beracha over the sighting of a budding tree.

The question arose regarding the case of a community that had the practice to recite Birkat Ha'ilanot together over a tree in a certain person's yard each year. Eventually, the resident of this home passed on, and some members of the community sought to choose a different tree for the annual recitation of Birkat Ha'ilanot.

The Halacha regarding such a case relates to a ruling in the Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 366:3) relevant to the law of Eruv. Whenever residents sharing a courtyard join together to make an Eruv in order to allow them to carry on Shabbat in the courtyard, they must purchase some bread or Masa and keep it in one of the residents' homes. The Shulhan Aruch ruled that if the Masa had been kept in certain resident's home for an extended period of time, they should not unnecessarily move it to a different resident's home. Doing so might give rise to some suspicion regarding the first resident, as people may think that he is no longer observant or is otherwise unqualified to keep the Eruv in his home. The Mishna Berura (commentary to the Shulhan Aruch by Rabbi Yisrael Kagan, 1839-1933) adds (366:26) that this applies even after the first resident's passing. The bread or Masa should remain with the inheritor of the home, unless some compelling reason dictates doing otherwise.

Rav Pinhas Zevihi (contemporary), in his work Birkat Yosef (p. 145; listen to audio recording for precise citation), applies this concept to Birkat Ha'ilanot, as well. Even though discontinuing the recitation of Birkat Ha'ilanot over a person's tree does not necessarily reflect anything negative about him, it is still improper and insensitive for a community to suddenly change to a different tree. Assuming the tree remains fully accessible, a community that had been accustomed to reciting the Beracha over a certain person's tree should continue to do so, even after that individual's death, not to mention during his lifetime.

Summary: If a community had been accustomed to reciting Birkat Ha'ilanot each year over a certain person's tree, it is proper for them to continue this practice, and they should not change to a different tree unnecessarily even after that individual's passing.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May One Leave a PayPal Account Active on Shabbat?
Why is Cooking Prohibited on Shabbat?
Habdala – Using Beverages Other Than Wine; Drinking the Wine
May a Man Recite Habdala for His Wife if He Had Already Recited or Heard Habdala?
Performing Melacha on Mosa’eh Shabbat Before Habdala
How Early on Friday Afternoon May a Woman Light Shabbat Candles Without Accepting Shabbat?
Praying Arbit Early on Friday Night
Why Do We Not Read From a Second Sefer Torah Every Shabbat?
The Order of Preference of Aliyot on Shabbat; Reciting Kaddish After Torah Reading
If One Mistakenly Recited the Weekday Amida on Shabbat
If a Person Recited the Wrong Amida Prayer on Shabbat
Crushing and Dissolving Ice on Shabbat
May One Who Owns a Vending Machine Allow it to Operate on Shabbat?
Hiring a Hazan for Shabbat
Is it Permissible to Talk on Shabbat if One’s Voice Would be Recorded?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found