DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 506 KB)
Asking One’s Parents for Forgiveness Before Yom Kippur

**TECHNICAL CHANGE AT DAILYHALACHA.COM**
Beginning, Monday Oct. 10th, we will be sending our Daily Emails from a new server.  Please make sure to WHITE LIST our email address return@dailyhalacha.com, by adding it to your address book.


Today’s Halacha:
The Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in Parashat Vayelech (listen to audio recording for precise citation), writes that just before the onset of  Yom Kippur, before one goes to the synagogue, he should kiss his father and mother’s hands and ask them for forgiveness.  Requesting forgiveness from one’s parents before Yom Kippur is, in the Ben Ish Hai’s words, a “Hiyub Gadol” – “great obligation” – to the extent that one who does not ask his parents for forgiveness is considered a sinner and belittles his parents’ honor.  The Ben Ish Hai explains that if Halacha requires asking forgiveness before Yom Kippur from anybody one may have wronged, then this is certainly obligatory from one’s parents, given that nobody perfectly fulfills the obligation to respect parents.  The Misva of honoring parents is especially demanding, and all of us are guilty, to one extent or another, of failing to show our parents proper respect.  It is therefore critically important to ask one’s parents for forgiveness before the onset of Yom Kippur.

If one foolishly does not ask his parents for forgiveness, the Ben Ish Hai writes, then his parents should nevertheless grant him forgiveness.  They should say explicitly that they grant their child complete forgiveness for whatever wrongs he had committed against them.

The Ben Ish Hai adds in this context that a husband should grant his wife forgiveness before Yom Kippur for overspending during the year, and that if one’s Rabbi lives in his town, he should visit him before Yom Kippur to ask forgiveness for failing to treat him with proper respect.

Summary: One is obligated to ask his parents for forgiveness before Yom Kippur, for failing to treat them with proper respect.  Given the strict demands of Kibud Horim (honoring parents), there is nobody who truly honors his parents as required, and therefore everyone must request his parents’ forgiveness before Yom Kippur.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Beracha Over Cooked Fruits and Vegetables
If People Recited the First Three Words of Birkat Ha’mazon Without a Zimun, and Then Realized Their Mistake
May One Use a Microphone for a Zimun?
The Beracha on Coffee
What Beracha Does One Recite on “Mebushal” Wine?
Does One Recite a Beracha on Unhealthy Foods?
The Beracha Over Chocolate
The Beracha Over Green Tomatoes; the Beracha Over Seeds
The Beracha on Crushed Fruits or Grains – Cornflakes, Apple Sauce, Mashed Potatoes, Amardeen, Peanut Butter, Falafel Balls, Popcorn, Humus and Tehina
Which Beracha Does One Recite When Drinking Straight From a Fruit?
Birkat Ha’ore’ah – The Guest’s Blessing for His Host
Zimun When One Member of the Group Finished Eating Before the Others
Insights on “Reseh Ve’hahalisenu”
The Rule of “Tadir” in Birkat Ha’mazon and the Amida
Answering to a Zimun if One Did Not Eat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found