DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 718 KB)
The Proper Words to Use When Bidding Somebody Farewell

The Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan of Radin, 1839-1933) discusses the proper protocol for bidding one’s fellow farewell (110:17). If a person bids somebody farewell in English, it is customary to extend pleasant greetings such as, "Have a good trip" or "Enjoy," and we sometimes use the Arabic expression for "God shall be with you." However, the Mishna Berura writes that if one bids his fellow farewell in Hebrew, then he must be very particular in the words he chooses. Namely, he should say, "Lech Le’shalom" (literally, "Go to peace"), and not "Lech Be’shalom" ("Go in peace"). The phrase "Lech Le’shalom" implies that the person should find peace at his destination, and this is certainly the kind of wish we would like to extend to our fellow. However, the expression "Lech Be’shalom" is used at funerals, Heaven forbid, when we bid farewell to the deceased in front of the coffin. It means that the deceased leaves the world after having completed the mission for which he was sent here. Quite obviously, we do not wish to make such a statement to a living person, and this expression should therefore not be used when bidding farewell to a living person.

This Halacha is alluded to in the Torah, in the description of the tensions that arose between Yosef and his brothers. The Torah relates that the brothers were unable "Dabero Le’shalom" (literally, "to speak with him peacefully" – Bereshit 37:4). Because of their feelings of animosity toward him, they were unable to extend to him the kind greeting of "Le’shalom" which people should use when bidding each other farewell.

Clearly, however, if a person mistakenly wished his friend "Lech Be’shalom," the friend should not feel anxious or concerned about what this expression might portend. Our Rabbis teach us that if one disregards superstition, then it will not have any effect on him. Rather than worrying about any harmful effects of the greeting, he should politely explain to his friend that Halacha advises people to say "Lech Leshalom," instead of "Lech Be’shalom."

Summary: If a person bids farewell to his fellow in Hebrew, he should say "Lech Le’shalom" and not "Lech Be’shalom."

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah: Selling an Entire Room That Contains Hames
Pesah- How Long Must One Wait Before Koshering Utensils?
Pesah: Must One Own the Massa to Fulfill the Misva?
Pesah-The Status of Hames After Pesah
Pesah- Paying for the Masa
Pesah- Bedikat Hames in a Hotel Room
Selling Hametz
Pesah – Breaking Off Undesirable Pieces of Masa
Kimha De’pis’ha – Donating to Charity Before Pesah
The Importance of Studying Torah During Hol Ha’mo’ed
Pesah – The Meaning of the Word “Afikoman”, Eating the Afikoman in One Place; If One Fell Asleep While Eating the Afikoman
Pesah- Halacha by Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar
Pesah- The Misva of Maror
Pesah- The Fast on Erev Pesah
Pesah: Drinking After Afikoman
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found