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...
May a Woman Recite Minha After Lighting Shabbat Candles?
Is It Permissible To Squeeze Grapes and Other Similar Foods In One's Mouth on Shabbat
Weighing and Measuring on Shabbat
May a Woman Drink After Lighting the Shabbat Candles?
Lighting Shabbat Candles in an Illuminated Room
Allowing an Internet Business to Run on Shabbat; Requesting a Wakeup Call in a Hotel on Shabbat
Is a Husband or Wife Bound by the Other’s Acceptance of Shabbat?
Public Transportation and Air Travel on Shabbat
Allowing a Gentile to Voluntarily Perform a Melacha on Shabbat; Making an Indirect Request to a Gentile on Shabbat
Using Electric Lights as Shabbat Candles
Asking Somebody Who Has Yet to Accept Shabbat to Perform Melacha
If One Mistakenly Began Reciting "Ata Honen" During the Amida on Shabbat
One Who Comes Late to the Synagogue on Friday Night
Is It Permissible To Carry In An Apartment Building Hallway On Shabbat
Asking a Non-Jew to Perform an Action on Shabbat That Will Result in a Melacha
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found