DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 530 KB)
Scheduling a Bar Misva During a Leap Year for a Boy Born in Adar

If a boy was born in Adar during a regular, twelve-month year, and the year of his Bar Misva is a leap year, when there are two months of Adar, he becomes Bar Misva in Adar Sheni. Halacha views Adar Sheni as the actual month of Adar, and it is therefore in Adar Sheni when a boy born in Adar thirteen years earlier becomes a Bar Misva.

The Shulhan Aruch (55:10) famously addresses an intriguing case involving twins born during a leap year who become Misva during a regular twelve-month year. The particular situation he discusses is when the older twin exits the womb in the final moments of 29 Adar Rishon, and the younger twin is born when it is already 1 Adar Sheni. If, thirteen years later, there is only one Adar, then the younger brother will become a Bar Misva nearly one month earlier than his older twin. The older brother was born on 29 Adar Rishon, and thus he will be considered a Bar Misva according to Halacha only on 29 Adar. The younger brother, however, who was born on the first day of Adar Sheni, becomes a Bar Misva on the first day of Adar – four weeks before his older brother! This is an especially fascinating situation, where a boy becomes a Bar Misva nearly a month before somebody born a few moments before him.

Summary: If a boy was born in Adar during an ordinary twelve-month year, and the year of his Bar Misva is a leap year, he becomes Bar Misva during Adar Sheni. If a boy was born on 29 Adar Rishon, and the year of his Bar Misva is an ordinary twelve-month year, he becomes Bar Misva on 29 Adar, yet a boy born one day after him, on 1 Adar Sheni, will become Bar Misva four weeks earlier, on 1 Adar.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Borer: Selecting from a Mixture of Different Types of Fish on Shabbat
Peeling Garlic, Onions, Bananas, Hard Boiled Eggs, Oranges, Grapefruits, Mango, Apples, Cucumbers, Carrots, Chicken with Skin on Shabbat
Borer: Is It Permissible to Select for Other People?
Borer: If One Selected on Shabbat by Mistake
Borer: Selecting When the Undesired Food is Edible
Borer: How to Remove the Waste from a Food?
Borer: Selecting When the Undesired Food is Edible
Borer – Is it Permissible to Remove Bones From Fish on Shabbat?
Selecting and Removing Undesirable Grapes From a Cluster on Shabbat
Borer- Does Retrieving or Selecting Apply To The Majority or Minority of Foods
If Someone Violated the Prohibition of Selecting and Laundering on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Cover a Pot of Fully Cooked Foods Containing Bones?
If One Mistakenly Covered a Pot of Uncooked Food on the Blech
Stirring & Serving Cooked Food Directly From a Blech on Shabbat
Warming Food on a Blech or Hotplate on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found