DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 904 KB)
If a Person Did Not Recite Habdala on the Night After Yom Tob

After Yom Tob, a person is required to recite Habdala over a cup of wine, just as one does after the conclusion of Shabbat every Saturday night (see Shulhan Aruch, Orah Haim 491:1). Unlike after Shabbat, however, after Yom Tob one does not recite the Beracha over the spices ("Besamim") or the Beracha over fire ("Boreh Me'oreh Ha'esh"); he recites only "Boreh Peri Ha'gefen" and the Beracha of "Ha'mabdil." This obligation applies both after the first days of Yom Tob, with the onset of Hol Ha'mo'ed, as well as on the conclusion of the final day of Yom Tob.

If a person did not, for whatever reason, recite Habdala on the night after Yom Tob, should he recite it at some later point, or does Halacha allow reciting Habdala only on that night?

With regard to Habdala after Shabbat, the Shulhan Aruch (299:6) cites two views as to the "deadline" before which this Habdala must be recited. One view maintains that one may recite Habdala through Sunday; according to this view, a person who did not recite Habdala after Shabbat until Sunday night may no longer do so. The second view, by contrast, contends that one still has the opportunity to recite Habdala until Tuesday. Hacham Ovadia Yosef ruled that one may recite Habdala only until the end of the day on Sunday, and only if he had not yet eaten since the conclusion of Shabbat. Once a person eats after Shabbat, or once the day ends on Sunday, one can no longer recite Habdala.

With regard to Habdala after Yom Tob, too, we find different views. Rabbi Yehuda Aya'ash (Algeria, 18th century), in his work Bet Yehuda (2:28), rules that one has the opportunity to recite Habdala throughout the week following the festival. So long as a week has yet to pass since the conclusion of Yom Tob, one may still recite Habdala.

Many others, however, disputed this position, and held that one may not recite Habdala at any point beyond the night following the conclusion of Yom Tob. The Hida (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1806), both in Birkeh Yosef and Mahazik Beracha, writes that one should not rely on this ruling of the Bet Yehuda. This stringent view is followed by the work Zera Emet (by Rabbi Yishmael Ha'kohen of Modona, Italy, 18th century), as well. The Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909) codifies this position in Parashat Vayeseh (Shana Sheniya, 23). More recently, Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul accepted this ruling in his work Or Le'sion (vol. 3, p. 197).

The Shulhan Aruch makes no mention of this case, which led many later authorities to conclude that he followed the second view recorded above. He likely held that Habdala may not be recited beyond the night after Yom Tob, and he therefore simply stated the requirement to recite Habdala on that night, without mentioning any possibility of reciting it at some point thereafter. This is indeed the accepted Halacha.

Summary: One who did not, for whatever reason, recite Habdala during the first night after Yom Tob, may no longer recite Habdala.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Rules Pertaining to a Husband and Wife Eating Together During the Period of Nidda
Some Laws Relevant Under the Chupa At The Wedding Ceremony
Sitting On The Bed or Couch During The Time of Nidah
Marrying The Daughter of A Kohen
Sephardim Only Should Make 2 Blessings, Not 7, When Making Sheva Berachot Outside The Groom’s House During The Week Following A Wedding
A Heker Is Required When A Husband Is Eating Alone With His Wife While She Is Needah
Is It Permissible For A Yisrael To Marry The Daughter of A Kohen
A Special Prayer for Ereb Rosh Hodesh Sivan
Yehi Shem on the 1st 13 Days of Sivan
Do Metal Peelers Require Tebila?
Is It Required To Dip An Oven Grate or Appliances Such As An Urn or In The Mikveh Kelim
If a Utensil That Had Not Undergone Immersion Became Mixed with Immersed Utensils
Do Plastic or Teflon Utensils Require Immersion in a Mikveh?
Is It Permissible To Allow Minors or Non-Jews To Dip Kelim In The Mikveh
Immersing a New Utensil in a Mikveh on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found