DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 492 KB)
The Status of a Kohen Whose Profession Requires Him to Become Tameh

If a Kohen makes a living engaging in a profession that requires him to regularly come in contact with dead bodies, then he forfeits the privileges of the Kehuna – he may not recite Birkat Kohanim, and he does not receive the first Aliya to the Torah. Examples include a Kohen who works as a medical examiner in a hospital and performs autopsies, and a Kohen who works in cemeteries. Such a Kohen is disqualified from the privileges of the Kehuna until he takes a formal, public vow that he will observe the laws of Kehuna and avoid contact with dead bodies.

This applies as well to a Kohen who is studying medicine and as part of his training dissects and works with human corpses. Regardless of whether the corpses are those of Jews or non-Jews, a Kohen may not come in contact with them even for the purpose of medical training, and if he does, then he is disqualified from reciting Birkat Kohanim and receiving the first Aliya to the Torah. If he worked with dead bodies out of ignorance, because he was unaware of the Halacha, then he is not disqualified, but if he was informed of the Halacha and knowingly violated this prohibition, then he may not recite Birkat Kohanim or receive the first Aliya to the Torah. This ruling is cited in the name of the Mahari Assad.

Summary: A Kohen who works in a profession involving contact with corpses, such as performing autopsies or working in a cemetery, or who dissects corpses as part of his medical training, is disqualified from reciting Birkat Kohanim and receiving the first Aliya to the Torah.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is It Permissible To Carry A Child On Shabbat In The Public Domain
Is It Permissible To Use A Body Sponge On Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Wear A Sports Coat Over Your Shoulders On Shabbat In The Public Domain
How to Squeeze Fruits and Vegetables on Shabbat
Borer: Selecting Cutlery to Set a Table for the Next Day
Borer: Selecting Clothes in a Dark Room
Borer: Is Peeling and Removing Wrappers from Food Considered Borer?
Borer: Is It Permissible to Scatter a Mixture and Select From It?
Borer: May One Remove a Fly from a Cup of Wine on Shabbat?
Opening Nuts & Peapods on Shabbat
Borer: Filtering Liquids on Shabbat
Borer- Is A Sink Drain Strainer Permissible On Shabbat Even Though It May Be Separating And Selecting Out Foods
Borer – May One Separate Food With a Fork, and How Long Before a Meal May One Separate Food?
Is It Permissible To Separate Forks From Knives on Shabbat?
Borer: Removing Bones from Fish on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found