DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is

Dedicated By
Stephen Allen

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 738 KB)
Why is There No Beracha Aharona Recited After Smelling Something Fragrant?

Halacha requires reciting a Beracha before smelling a fragrant smell. Depending on the nature of item which one smells, he would recite beforehand the Beracha of either "Aseh Besamim," "Asbeh Besamim," "Mineh Besamim" or "Ha’noten Re’ah Tob Ba’perot." This Beracha over smelling is a "Birkat Ha’nehenin," a Beracha which one recites before deriving benefit from this world, similar to the Berachot we recite before eating or drinking.

The Ben Ish Hai (Rabbi Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in Parashat Vaethanan, raises the question of why the Sages did not institute the recitation of a Beracha Aharona after one smells a fragrance. Just as we must recite a Beracha Aharona after eating or drinking, we should, seemingly, be required to recite a Beracha after smelling. Yet, the Sages required that we recite a Beracha only before smelling, but not after smelling.

The answer, the Ben Ish Hai explains, lies in the fact that the moment a person stops smelling the fragrance, he no longer derives any benefit or enjoyment. Smelling differs in this respect from eating and drinking, which leave an effect upon the person that leaves an enduring effect. Eating or drinking leaves a person feeling satiated and content even after he has ingested the food or the drink, and this ongoing benefit warrants the recitation of a Beracha Aharona. Indeed, Halacha states that a person who forgot to recite a Beracha Aharona after eating may recite the Beracha later, on condition that he still feels satiated. Once he feels hungry again, then he no longer enjoys the benefit of his eating and he may therefore no longer recite the Beracha. This Halacha proves that the Beracha Aharona depends upon the ongoing enjoyment that one experiences. We therefore do not recite a Beracha Aharona after smelling a fragrance, since smelling leaves no lasting effect after a person has stopped smelling.

The Ben Ish Hai adds that smelling provides more benefit to the soul than it does to the body. Its beneficial effect upon the soul lasts even after one smells, but because this is a spiritual – rather than physical – effect, we do not feel it. The Sages instituted Birkot Ha’nehenin only for benefit which we can physically experience, and therefore although we recite a Beracha before we enjoy a fragrance, there is no Beracha recited after smelling.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If One is Unsure Whether or Not He Counted the Omer
May One Purchase and Wear New Clothing During the Omer Period?
Sefirat Ha’omer – Training Children in the Misva; The Status of Women Vis-ŕ-vis Counting the Omer
If One Remembers After Sundown That He Had Not Counted the Omer
Sefirat Ha’omer – If the Hazzan Had Missed a Day of Counting
Sefirat Ha’omer – If One Forgot to Count at Night and the Next Day, Until Ben Ha’shemashot
Sefirat Ha’omer – If a Person Missed a Day of Counting
Sefirat HaOmer- Ladies Counting The Omer??
Sefirat Ha'omer – Counting Before the Age of Bar-Misva, and a Boy Who Becomes Bar-Misva during the Omer
The Underlying Reason Behind the Mitzva of Sefirat Ha'omer; the Status of the Mitzva Nowadays
Would it be Permissible to Take a Haircut if the Quarantine Ends During the Omer Period?
Cutting Fingernails, Moving Into a New Home and Hosting a Hanukat Ha’bayit During the Omer
May a Bar Misva Boy and His Father Take a Haircut in Honor of the Occasion During the Omer?
If a Community Rabbi Missed a Day of Sefirat Ha’omer
May a Music Teacher Continue Teaching Music During the Omer Period?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found