DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Judit bat Gizella

Dedicated By
Families Kleis and Kirschke

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 472 KB)
Answering to a Beracha, Kaddish or Kedusha After Washing Netilat Yadayim

If a person washed his hands for Netilat Yadayim, in order to eat bread, and before he dried his hands he heard a Beracha, Kaddish or Kedusha, is he allowed to answer "Amen" or respond to the Kaddish or Kedusha? Does such a response constitute a "Hefsek" (interruption) in between the washing and drying of the hands, or does the importance of responding to the Beracha override this concern?

Hacham Ovadia Yosef addresses this question in his work Yabia Omer (vol. 8, Orah Haim 20) and writes that the Halacha in such a case depends on whether or not the individual had recited the Beracha over the hand-washing ("Al Netilat Yadayim"). Once a person recites this Beracha, he must immediately dry his hands, and he may not make any interruption – even to respond to a Beracha or Kaddish – before drying his hands. If, however, one washed his hands and heard the Beracha before he recited the Beracha, then he should answer "Amen" and then recite the Beracha over the hand-washing. Of course, this would also apply to Kaddish and Kedusha. One may answer with the appropriate response only if he has yet to recite the Beracha of "Al Netilat Yadayim"; once he recited this Beracha, he may not say anything until he dries his hands.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Importance of Giving Charity Before Praying; If One’s Prayer is Disrupted by Charity Collectors
The Yartzheit of the Ben Ish Hai
Feeding a Child Before Shaharit or Before Kiddush; Feeding a Child Dairy After He Ate Meat
May a Person Receive Two Aliyot in a Single Torah Reading?
Is it Permissible to Refer to One’s Father or Rabbi by His Name if He Adds a Title?
Calling Somebody With the Same Name as One’s Father
The Importance of Studying the Halachot of Respecting Parents
The Procedure When a Bet Din Announces Its Decision
Reciting Kaddish for a Parent
Ensuring Not to Receive a More Prominent Aliya Than One’s Father
Calling One’s Son in the Presence of His Father With the Same Name
Berit Mila – Eliyahu Ha’nabi’s Chair
Birkat Kohanim – The Unconditional Blessing
The Halachic Status of the Period Between Amud Ha’shahar and Sunrise
Can the Officiating Rabbi at a Wedding Serve as One of the Witnesses?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found