DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Solomon Graff

Dedicated By
Jay Graff

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 340 KB)
Allowing a Doorman to Open an Electric Door When One Enters a Building on Shabbat

In many apartment buildings and hotels today, a power-operated door is used in the main entrance. A doorman stands by the entrance and presses a button or activates a sensor that electronically opens the door when a resident or guest arrives. The question naturally arises as to whether a Jew may enter such a building on Shabbat. Halacha forbids allowing a gentile to perform Melacha (an act forbidden on Shabbat) on one's behalf on Shabbat. Seemingly, then, it would be forbidden for a Jew to allow a doorman to press the button to open the door for him when he arrives at the building on Shabbat.

In truth, however, Rav Shemuel Pinhasi (contemporary scholar in Israel), in his work Ve'daber Davar (4:10), rules that one may allow a doorman to activate the electric door on Shabbat. Since the possibility exists of opening the door manually, by turning the handle, we do not consider the gentile as performing Melacha on behalf of the Jew. The doorman chooses to open the door electronically for his own convenience, and not because the Jew specifically wishes that the door be opened in this fashion. As such, the gentile acts in his own interest, rather than in the Jew's, and the Jew may therefore allow him to open the door electronically.

The Jew may not, however, explicitly request that the doorman open the door for him on Shabbat. He may make such a request only indirectly, such as by saying, "The door is locked" or "I would like to come inside."

Summary: One may allow a gentile doorman to open a power-operated door on his behalf on Shabbat. It is forbidden, however, to explicitly request that he open the door; one must express this request indirectly, such as by saying, "The door is locked."

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Eating and Drinking After Mayim Aharonim, or After Expressing One’s Intention to Recite Birkat Ha’mazon
Is It Required To Say Shehakol If Birkat HaGefen Is Heard?
Reciting a Beracha Over Medications
If a Group of Ten or More Men Forgot to Recite “Elokenu” in the Zimun
Does One Answer Amen to a Beracha Which is Unwarranted According to His Custom?
Is There a Beracha That One Recites During an Earthquake?
The Berachot Recited Over Thunder and Lightning
Does Halacha Treat Ice Cream as a Food or a Beverage?
The Proper Sequence of Berachot When Eating an Apple and a Banana
Must One Recite the Beracha of Mezonot Over Dessert?
Reciting Birkat Ha’gomel After Being Released From Prison
Reciting Birkat Ha’gomel After a Trip That Violated Halacha
Using a Small Amount of Water for Mayim Aharonim
Asher Yasar – The Importance and Basic Interpretation of the Beracha
Should One Interrupt His Beracha Me’en Shalosh to Answer to Kaddish or Kedusha?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found