DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Avraham ben Hillel

Dedicated By
Simcha Moshe Gerzoff

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 506 KB)
Marrying One’s Wife’s Sister After Death or Divorce

The Torah forbids marrying one’s wife’s sister as long as the wife is alive. Even if one divorces his wife, it is forbidden for him to marry his wife’s sister. This applies even to his wife’s half-sister, regardless of whether they share the same father or the same mother. If one’s wife dies, Heaven forbid, then he may marry her sister.

The Shulhan Aruch (Eben Ha’ezer 15), based on the Mishna in Masechet Yebamot (24), discusses the case of a man who hears that his wife passed away, and then marries her sister. Sometime later, he hears that the wife had actually not died at the time when he married her sister, but has since passed on. In such a case, any children born to the second wife while the first wife was alive have the status of Mamzerim, since they were born from a forbidden relationship. Children born after the first wife had died, however, are ordinary Jews and do not have the status of Mamzerim.

This Halacha should remind us of the complexity and severity of the laws regarding Yihus – ascertaining valid lineage before marrying. As in the case described above, marrying hastily before assuring proper Yihus could have disastrous results, to which we may apply the proverb, "Me’uvat Lo Yuchal Litkon" ("A corrupt deed cannot be corrected" – Kohelet 1:15). One must therefore ascertain before marrying that the marriage is permissible.

Summary: It is forbidden to marry one wife’s sister – even after divorcing the wife – unless the wife dies, Heaven forbid.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May a Seller Charge a Higher Price if Payment is Delayed?
May a Lender Charge a Penalty for a Delayed Payment of the Debt?
Seizing a Debtor's Property in Lieu of Payment
Defining "Ri’bitt " (Interest)
"Ri’bit": The Prohibition Against Receiving or Paying Interest
Is It Permissible To Poach (Take Away) A Customer
The Halachic Propriety of Opening a Competing Business
Exceptions to the Rule Allowing a Neighbor the Right of First Refusal
Can a Neighbor Exercise His Right of First of Refusal if He Did Not Do So Immediately; a Business Partner's Right of First Refusal
Offering First Right of Refusal to a Partner or Neighbor
Damaging Somebody’s Property for the Purpose of Saving a Life
Is There a Liability When a Child Damages Somebody’s Property?
If One Damages Somebody’s Property In His Sleep, Under Intoxication, While Celebrating, or During a Sports Game
Liability for Damages Caused While Walking or Running in a Public Domain
The Extent of Liability for Property Damages
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found