DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 478 KB)
Is it Forbidden for a Kohen to be in the Same Room as Ashes of a Dead Body?

The Rambam (Rabbi Moshe Maimonides, Spain-Egypt, 1135-1204), in Hilchot Tum’at Met (3:10), rules that if the body of a deceased person was burned, Heaven forbid, the ashes do not transmit the status of Tum’at Met. Therefore, it is permissible for a Kohen to be in the same room as ashes of a cremated body. Thus, for example, a Kohen may visit the Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem, even though the museum has actual ashes of Holocaust victims, may Hashem avenge their blood. By the same token, a Kohen may visit the sites of concentration camps and other sites that have piles of ashes of victims. Since ashes of a deceased person do not emit Tum’a, there is no prohibition at all for a Kohen to be near these ashes.

However, a Kohen who visits such sites should ensure not to touch the ashes, given the possibility that there might be small pieces of bone among the ashes. Touching a piece of bone that is the size of a Se’ora (kernel of barley) renders one Tameh, and therefore a Kohen should ensure not to touch the ashes in these sites. Of course, it would in any event be inappropriate for anybody to touch the ashes of a deceased person.

(Based on Mamlechet Kohanim, pp. 224-225)

Summary: Although a Kohen may not be in the same room as a human corpse, he may be in the same room as ashes of a body that was burned, and thus a Kohen may visit Yad Vashem and other sites that have ashes of Holocaust victims.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Removing a Teabag From a Teacup on Shabbat
Borer – Removing a Fly From Soup or From a Beverage on Shabbat
Halachot of Borer as They Apply to Eating Soup
Borer – Separating Food Which One Dislikes From Food Which He Likes
Borer – If One Separated Food and Then Decides Not to Eat
Borer – Peeling More Fruits Than are Needed for the Current Meal
Borer – Separating Foods for Somebody Else
Borer – Separating Foods That are Together on a Plate But Not Mixed
Borer – Removing Edible Food From Inedible Food
Borer – The Status of Food That Was Separated in Forbidden Fashion on Shabbat
Borer – Peeling on Onion on Shabbat
Is it Permissible to Insulate a Pot of Food With Towels on Shabbat?
If A Blech Had Been Placed on a Stove Before Shabbat and Then Fell Off
The Shabbat Haftara Reading
May One Open a Door on Shabbat if it Has Shelves with Mukseh Items?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found