DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 764 KB)
A Person Who Fell Asleep During a Meal and Then Wishes to Continue Eating

It often happens that people fall asleep during the Shabbat meal on Friday night. If a person falls asleep, and after he wakes up he decides to eat some more food, must he recite new Berachot? Seemingly, his nap constitutes a Hefsek (interruption) which negates the original Beracha he recited over the bread, such that he would have to recite new Berachot over any food he wishes to eat.

The Shulhan Aruch addresses this question in the Orah Haim section (178:7; listen to audio recording for precise citation). He writes that if a person sleeps a "Shinat Ara’i" (literally, "temporary sleep"), as opposed to a "formal" sleep, then he does not recite new Berachot when he wakes up and resumes eating. Of course, this raises the question of how to define a "temporary" sleep. The later authorities explain that if a person sleeps in a seated position, then we define his nap as "temporary" regardless of how long he sleeps. Since people normally sleep while lying down, we classify sleep in a seated position as "temporary." Therefore, one who falls asleep in his chair at the Shabbat table does not recite new Berachot when he resumes eating, regardless of the duration of his nap. It should be noted that he must wash his hands (without a Beracha), as is required whenever a person wakes up from sleep.

If a person went to lie down during his meal and slept, then he must, indeed, recite new Berachot when he wakes up and resumes eating. Halacha states that if a person lies down and sleeps for the period of time needed to walk one hundred Amot (approx. 200 feet), which is estimated as just one minute, then his previous Berachot are negated. Therefore, if a person retires to the couch during his meal and sleeps, even for just a few minutes, he must recite new Berachot when he returns to the table and resumes eating. Of course, as mentioned earlier, he must also wash his hands (without a Beracha) just as one must anytime he sleeps.

Summary: If a person fell asleep in his chair during a meal, when he wakes up he must wash his hands without a Beracha, but does not have to recite new Berachot on the food he eats. If he fell asleep while lying down on a bed or couch one minute or more, then he must wash his hands and also recite new Berachot on the food he eats upon awakening.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Proper Intention While Pronouncing the Letter “Dalet” in “Ehad” During Shema
Bringing Mashiah by Paying Attention to the Repetition of the Amida
Praying From a Mobile phone
Reciting Shema Right Before Sunrise
The Custom to Recite at the End of the Amida a Verse Associated With One’s Name
Explaining Why Kaddish is Mostly in Aramaic
Bringing a Sefer Torah From the Synagogue to a Private Minyan
Laws of Kaddish
Combining Two Parashiyot in the Diaspora to “Catch Up”
If Fewer Than Ten Men are Answering to Kaddish or to the Repetition of the Amida
Answering “Amen” to Birkot Ha’Torah
If One Remembered During the Beracha of “Yoser Or” That He Had Forgotten to Recite Birkot Ha’Torah
Appreciating Birkat Kohanim
Insights and Customs Relevant to the “Nishmat” Prayer
The Special Significance of the “Nishmat” Prayer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found