DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 598 KB)
Purim- Laws of Fasting: Rinsing One’s Mouth, Brushing One’s Teeth, Chewing Gum, and Swallowing Pills

** Go to www.dailyhalacha.com and click on ‘Matanot La’evyonim’ to fulfill the misva of giving to the needy on Purim, and have Rabbi Eli Mansour distribute the funds for you. **

**Launching Wednesday March 11th: www.DAILYTEHILLIM.com**



Generally speaking, it is proper for a person to rinse his mouth in the morning before he prays, in order to ensure that he prays to the Almighty with a clean mouth. On a fast day, however, the concern arises that one might inadvertently swallow some water while rinsing, in violation of the fast. Hacham Ovadia Yosef therefore rules that in the morning on a fast day, one should rinse his mouth with less than a Rebi’it (slightly more than 3 oz.) of water, so as to ensure that he does not violate the fast. One should also keep his head bent downward and spit the water out immediately, without gargling, to avoid swallowing water.

One who wishes to brush his teeth on a fast day may do so, provided that he rinses his mouth with less than a Rebi’it of water.

May one chew gum on a fast day?

The authorities debate the question of whether chewing constitutes "eating" in the Halachic sense. Hacham Ovadia Hedaya (1890-1969), in his work Yaskil Abdi, rules that chewing gum is not considered "eating," and thus one does not recite a Beracha before he chews gum. Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, in his work Yabia Omer (vol. 7, Orah Haim 33), disagrees, and rules that if one chews gum coated with sugar or other sweetening agent, he must recite the Beracha of She’hakol. By the same token, it would be forbidden to chew sweet chewing gum on a fast day. One may, however, chew a substance that has no flavor, such as wax used by people wearing braces, as this certainly does not constitute "eating."

A person suffering from a headache on a fast day may take pain relieving pills. If possible, he should ingest the pills without water. However, Hacham Ovadia Yosef rules that if one cannot swallow pills without water, then he may use a small sip of water, though preferably he should try ingesting the pills without water.

Summary: On a fast day, one may rinse his mouth and brush his teeth, provided that he puts less than 3 oz. of water in his mouth, and takes precautions not to swallow any water. One should not chew gum on a fast day, though one may chew flavorless substances, such as wax used by those wearing braces. One who must take pain relieving pills should ingest the pills without water; if necessary, though, he may use a small sip of water to help him swallow the pill.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Succot- The Walls of the Sukka
Simhat Torah- Is It Permissible For 2 Kohanim or 2 Leviim To Have A Back To Back Aliyah at the Torah
Succot – If the Top Leaf of the Lulav is Split
Succot – If an Etrog Has a Hole or Mark That Can Only be Seen With a Magnifying Glass
Succot – When Precisely to Recite the Beracha Over the Arba Minim
Sukkot – Placing the Arba Minim in Water on Yom Tob; Carrying the Arba Minim Home From the Synagogue; The Custom to Give the Etrog to a Pregnant Woman
Succot- Waving the Lulab
The Hakafot on Simhat Torah
The Importance of Celebrating and Studying Torah During Hol Ha’mo’ed
Sukkot – Using Wooden Sechach Supported by a Metal Frame
Simhat Torah- Sitting During Hakafot; a Mourner’s Participation in Hakafot
Succot- The Mukse Status of the Sukka Decorations
Succot- Is it Permissible to Smell the Hadasim or the Etrog During Succot?
Succot- The Fundamental Required Intention and Concentration When Fulfilling the Misva of Sukka
Halachot for When the First Day of Sukkot Falls on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found