DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Honor Of
 Rabbi Yosef Mizrahi
"May Hashem assist his efforts to bring all Jews back to the Torah."

Dedicated By
Elke Shanay and Daniel Jacov

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 536 KB)
Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Cut Tissue Paper; Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Turn on a Light for a Frightened Child

Halacha forbids cutting tissue paper on Shabbat. If a person did not prepare cut paper before Shabbat and finds himself in need of tissue paper, he may cut paper with a "Shinui," meaning, in an abnormal way, and not along the perforated line.

One is also permitted in such a case to ask a gentile to cut tissue paper for him on Shabbat, provided that he specifies that the paper should not be cut along the perforated line. Cutting not along the perforated line is forbidden only "Mi'de'rabbanan" – by force of Rabbinic enactment, and Halacha allows asking a gentile on Shabbat to perform an act forbidden "Mi'de'rabbanan" in cases of great necessity. (This Halachic principle is called "Shebut De'shbut Be'makom Sorech Gadol.") This situation, which involves basic hygiene and human dignity, would certainly qualify as a dire necessity and thus one may, when necessary, ask a gentile on Shabbat to cut tissue paper not along the perforated line. This is the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, as recorded in Yalkut Yosef (307:49), and of Rav Shemuel Pinhasi, in his work Ve'daber Dabar (p. 199).

If the lights go out in one's home, and a child in the home is frightened by the dark and cannot be calmed, one may indirectly ask a gentile to turn on a light. Rav Pinhasi cites this ruling from Rav Yaakov Haim Sofer (1870-1939) in Kaf Ha'haim (276:14). Although one may not explicitly ask a gentile to restore the light in such a case, he may indirectly express such a request (such as by saying, "The house is too dark") in order to calm the frightened child.

Summary: One who does not have cut tissue paper on Shabbat may ask a gentile to cut paper for him, but he must specify that the paper should not be cut along the perforation. If the lights go out and a child is inconsolably frightened by the dark, one may hint to a gentile that he wishes for the light to be restored.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Chanukah- The Proper Position When Lighting Chanukah Candles in the Synagogue
Chanukah- The Procedure for Torah Reading When Rosh Chodesh Tevet Falls on Shabbat
Chanukah- Birkat Roeh- When A Person Knows He Will Be Unable To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Does One Repeat The Berachot At Home If He Already Lit The Menorah With The Berachot In Shul
Chanukah- A Dignified Menorah
Chanukah- When Your Neighbor Does Not Have Enough Money To Buy Oil To Light The Menorah
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Rekindle or Light The Menorah After Lighting Shabbat Candles on Erev Shabbat
Chanukah- Is Al Ha’nisim Required In Arbit On The First Day Of Chanukah, Or In Musaf Shabbat and Rosh Chodesh
Chanukah- Hallel for Men and Women On Chanukah
Chanukah- The Proper Time for Lighting Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- The Traveler At Time of Menorah Lighting
Chanukah- Menorah Lighting in Shul
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Allow A Child to Light Chanukah Candles
Chanukah- 2 Halachot: Eating Dairy Products on Chanukah, and The Proper Procedure of Lighting Before and After Shabbat
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Answer To Other Berachot During Hallel
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found