DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Abraham ben Salha

Dedicated By
His children and grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 834 KB)
Yom Tob Candle Lighting: The Proper Time for Lighting, Reciting the Beracha Before Lighting

On Ereb Rosh Hashanah, just as on every Ereb Shabbat and Ereb Yom Tob, women light candles and recite a Beracha. The Beracha recited when lighting candles for Rosh Hashanah is the same as for other Yamim Tobim – "Asher Kideshanu…Le’hadlik Ner Shel Yom Tob."

Some women have the custom to light Yom Tob candles only when the husband returns home from the synagogue, just before the Yom Tob meal. It is preferable, however, to light candles eighteen minutes before sundown, just as is done on Ereb Shabbat.

There are different customs regarding the recitation of the Beracha over the candle lighting on Ereb Shabbat. Hacham Ovadia Yosef maintains that women should follow the view of the Shulhan Aruch and recite the Beracha before lighting the Shabbat candles. Some, however, follow the opinion cited by the Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in Parashat Noah, which requires lighting before reciting the Beracha. According to this view, by reciting the Beracha over the candle lighting a woman already accepts Shabbat, and will thus be unable to light a candle thereafter. She must therefore ensure to first light the candles and then recite the Beracha. This is also the view of the Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Poland, 1525-1572). The accepted Halacha, as Hacham Baruch Ben Haim ruled, is that each woman should follow her mother’s custom in this regard.

However, as Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul (Israel, 1923-1998) notes in his work Or Le’sion (vol. 3, 18:1), this applies only with regard to the Shabbat candle lighting. When it comes to candle lighting for Yom Tob, according to all views a woman should first recite the Beracha and then light the candles. After all, it is permissible to light a candle (from a preexisting flame) on Yom Tob, and thus even if a woman accepts Yom Tob by reciting the Beracha, she is still allowed to then light the Yom Tob candles. Hence, even women who are accustomed to lighting the Shabbat candles before reciting the Beracha should ensure to recite the Beracha before lighting the Yom Tob candles.

Some women have the practice to recite the Beracha of "She’heheyanu" at the time when they light the Yom Tob candles, and this practice indeed has sources on which to rely. However, Hacham Ben Sion writes that it is preferable for women not to recite "She’heheyanu" at the time of candle lighting, and to instead fulfill their obligation by listening to this Beracha’s recitation at Kiddush and reciting "Amen."

Summary: Women should light Yom Tob candles eighteen minutes before sundown on Ereb Yom Tob, as they do on Ereb Shabbat. Even if a woman generally lights the Shabbat candles before reciting the Beracha, when it comes to the Yom Tob candles she should first recite the Beracha and then light. It is preferable for a woman not to recite "She’heheyanu" at the time of Yom Tob candle lighting, and instead listen to the Beracha’s recitation at Kiddush, though those who do recite it at the time of candle lighting have sources on which to rely.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Baking Hallah on Erev Shabbat
If One Mistakenly Cooked Food During Ben Ha’shemashot on Friday Afternoon
Is It Permissible On Erev Shabbat To Fill Up An Urn With Water That Will Become Cooked On Shabbat
Reheating Dry Food on Shabbat on a Blech or Hotplate
Is A Thermos or Tiger Pot Considered A Keli Rishon
Is A Ladle Considered a Keli Rishon or Keli Sheni
Pouring From an Urn Into a Cup of Cold Liquid on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Place Liquid Food on a Hotplate on Shabbat Before the Timer Activates the Hotplate
The Proper Way To Extract the Broth From Vegetables in a Vegetable Soup on Shabbat
The Proper Way To Extract Vegetables from Soup on Shabbat; Washing Grapes on Shabbat; Using a Perforated Spoon on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Prepare Tehina On Shabbat
Understanding the Laws of Muktze- Prohibition of Carrying Items on Shabbat, Such as Pens, Pots, and New Empty Wallets
Stirring Food In A Pot and Serving From A Pot On Shabbat
Cooking On Shabbat on Surfaces Heated by the Sun
Separating A Bottle Cap From Its Ring on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found