DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Ezra "Sury" Dayan Ben Guilsom

Dedicated By
His Family - Panama

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 722 KB)
Tebilat Kelim – The Status of Nutcrackers, Dentures, Utensils Purchased as Merchandise, and Utensils Made by a Gentile With a Jew’s Material

Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Halichot Olam (vol. 7, p. 267), addresses several laws relevant to the obligation of Tebilat Kelim – immersing utensils purchased from a gentile (listen to audio recording for precise citation). He writes that a nutcracker does not, strictly speaking, require immersion. A nutcracker resembles scissors used to cut vegetables, which do not require immersion, and, in fact, a nutcracker is less of a candidate for Tebila because it comes in contact with only the shell, and not the edible food. Hacham Ovadia cites this ruling from the work Zibheh Sedek (by Rav Abdullah Somech, 1813-1889). However, he adds, since some authorities dispute this ruling, it is preferable to immerse nutcrackers without reciting a Beracha.

Dentures do not require immersion, even if they were manufactured and sold by a non-Jew.

If a Jew purchased utensils as merchandise which he intends to sell, he should not use them, even once, unless he first immerses them. There is a common misconception that one may use a new utensil once without immersing it. This is incorrect; a new utensil may not be used even once without immersion. Hacham Ovadia adds that if somebody purchased a utensil as merchandise and immersed it, he must inform the customer that the utensil has already been immersed, so that the customer will not recite a Beracha Le’batala (blessing in vain).

If a Jew gave pieces of metal, such as silver, to a gentile craftsman to make a utensil for him, the utensil does not require immersion. Since the material belonged to a Jew, the utensil does not have to be immersed, even though it was produced by a non-Jew.

Summary: Nutcrackers do not require immersion before use, though it is preferable to immerse them without a Beracha. Dentures do not require immersion. If a Jew purchased a utensil as merchandise which he intends to sell, he should not use it without immersion. If he immerses it, he must inform the customer that it has been immersed. If a Jew gave metal to a non-Jewish craftsman to make him a utensil, the utensil does not require immersion.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Establishing a Partnership with a Non-Jew in a Business Open on Shabbat- Part 1
Sending Express Mail over Shabbat
Mailing Letters That Will be Handled on Shabbat
Elective Surgery Before Shabbat
May a non-Jew Carry Items Out of a Jewish Home on Shabbat?
Dropping Off Clothes at the Cleaners on Erev Shabbat
Ordering a Taxi for Immediately After Shabbat
Submitting Items for Servicing by a Non-Jew
May a Jew Allow his Non-Jewish Sales Representative to Work on Shabbat?
Is it Permitted to Participate in an Online Auction Taking Place on Shabbat?
Is it Permissible to Have a Check Cashed on Shabbat?
May One Allow a Plumber to Perform Repairs on Shabbat?
Is it Permissible to Schedule a Bank Payment for Shabbat?
May a Jew Engage a Customer Service Company on Shabbat?
May e-Commerce be Conducted on Shabbat?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found