DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 778 KB)
Hanukah – One Who Cannot Afford Enough Oil for the Hanukah Candles

The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 671) emphasizes the unique importance of the Misva of Hanukah candle lighting (listen to audio recording for precise citation). Indeed, the Gemara in Masechet Shabbat (23) comments that one who properly observes the Misva of candle lighting on Shabbat and Hanukah is rewarded with children who become Torah scholars. The Sages inferred this from the famous verse in Mishle (6:23), "For a Misva is [like] a candle, and Torah is light." So important is the Misva of Hanukah candles, the Shulhan Aruch writes, that a poor person supported by charity is required to borrow money or sell his clothes to purchase oil for this purpose. Even abject poverty does not exempt an individual from this very special obligation.

As we know, the obligation of Hanukah candles requires, strictly speaking, the kindling of just a single candle each night. The ideal standard, however, requires lighting one candle the first night and then an additional candle each subsequent night, such that eight candles are lit on the eighth night. The Shulhan Aruch, based on the ruling of Tosafot in Masechet Shabbat (21), rules that only one set of candles is lit each night per household. Regardless of how many people live in the home, only one candle is lit on the first night, two on the second, and so on.

If a person cannot afford enough oil to sustain all the candles for the minimum required duration of a half-hour, he should light only one candle. For example, if on the third night he has enough oil to sustain a single candle for a half-hour, but if he would light three candles they would not burn for a half-hour, he should perform the minimum requirement of lighting a single candle. Otherwise, if he lights three candles and they burn for less than a half-hour, he does not fulfill even the basic obligation. He should therefore light one candle with enough oil for it to burn a half-hour, thus ensuring that he at least fulfills the basic requirement.

If a person has enough oil only to light a single candle, he should light the candle on the first night. This is the ruling of the Kaf Ha’haim (Rabbi Yaakob Haim Sofer, Baghdad-Israel, 1870-1939), who claimed that one should perform the Misva at the first available opportunity, rather than delay it to a different night.

If a person does not have any oil at all for Hanukah candles, and his fellow has only enough oil for his Hanukah candles, the latter should share some oil with his impoverished friend, even if he will then be unable to light all the candles. It is preferable for a person to fulfill only the basic obligation of lighting a single candle each night and allow his fellow to also fulfill this Misva, than to light all the candles each night while his fellow cannot light at all. One must therefore share his oil with the poor to enable them to light, even if this means foregoing on the ideal standard of the Misva, and lighting only a single candle each night.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Rosh Hashana- Is it Proper to Cry During the Rosh Hashanah Prayers?
Talking in Between the Shofar Blasts
Reciting Shehehiyanu Over a Grafted Fruit on Rosh Hashanah
Exemptions in a Case of a Deferred Fast Day
Rosh Hashana- Blowing the Shebarim and Shebarim-Teru’a Sounds in a Single Breath
Rosh Hashana- A Berit Mila Held on Rosh Hashanah
What Are The Required Qualifications To Be Appointed As Hazan For The High Holiday Services
Why Do We Always Make the Beracha of Shehechiynau After The Beracha of The Mitzvah, For Example As Done On The Shofar On Rosh Hashana
Rosh Hashana- Some Laws Regarding Musaf Including The Topic of Ladies Praying Musaf Or Not
Rosh Hashana- Is It Permissible To Blow The Shofar On Rosh Hashana After Shul, After The Required Tikeeot Are Sounded
Rosh Hashana- The Correct Time for Tashlich & Tashlich on Shabbat
Rosh Hashana- Understanding The Custom of Tashlich
Eating Bread in the Sukka on the First Night of Sukkot; Eating on Erev Sukkot; Rainfall on the First Night of Sukkot
Succot- How Does One Choose a Kosher Etrog?
How does one Choose Hadasim?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found