DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 436 KB)
Do People Who Travel by Ferry Every Day Recite Birkat Ha’gomel?

The Minhat Yishak (Rav Yishak Weiss, 1901-1989) addresses the situation of people who live on an island and thus frequently travel by ferry through waterways. He writes that since the ordinary mode of travel for such people is by ferry, and this is how they get to the places they need to go on a day-to-day basis, they do not recite Birkat Ha’gomel after a ferry ride, even if the ride entails a trip of 72 minutes or longer. Since this is their normal, everyday practice, and Birkat Ha’gomel is required only after an unusual situation of danger, people in this situation do not recite the Beracha.

Rav Shemuel Pinhasi (contemporary) adopts this ruling in his work Ve’chol Ha’haim (p. 47; listen to audio recording for precise citation). He gives the example of the city of Venice, where the only way to travel from one place to the next is by ferryboat. Since ferry travel is the ordinary, day-to-day means of travel, people who live in such places would not recite Birkat Ha’gomel after a trip in a ferry.

Summary: People who regularly travel by ferry do not recite Birkat Ha’gomel after a ferry trip.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Procedure for the Recitation of Kiddush on Friday Night
If One Did Not Recite Kiddush on Friday Night
Is It Permissible to Read a Newspaper That was Delivered on Shabbat?
Detaching, Smelling and Watering Plants on Shabbat
Bathing on Shabbat
Sweeping and Mopping Floors on Shabbat
Combing Hair on Shabbat
Toothpicks, Floss, or Toothbrush on Shabbat
Must the Friday Night Meal Take Place Near the Shabbat Candles?
Is It Permissible To Move Shabbat Candles, Even If One Has Not Yet Accepted Shabbat
May One Add Water to the Oil Cups of the Shabbat Candles?
Shabbat Candle Lighting – Unmarried Girls, and Students in a Dormitory
If a Woman Lit Shabbat Candles Before Praying Minha
Lighting Shabbat Candles in an Illuminated Room
Warming a Baby’s Bottle in Hot Water; Cooking Rice or Kishkeh in a Pot of Hamin (Cholent) on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found