DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Tinok ben Sara
"Please Please daven/say tehillim/ do a mitzvah for the recovery of TInok ben Sara May Hakadosh Baruch Hu send this little tzaddik'l a Refuah Shelaima! "

Dedicated By
Anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 462 KB)
Tisha B’Ab on Mosa’eh Shabbat – Reciting Habdala if One is Exempt From Fasting

The obligation to fast on Tisha B’Ab does not apply to ill patients, even those whose condition is not life-threatening. For example, if a person has a fever on Tisha B’Ab, he is exempt from fasting. This exemption also applies to those who are frail and to the elderly. (Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul ruled that people aged 80 and above are exempt from fasting on Tisha B’Ab.) Of course, ill or frail individuals should consult with a physician and with a Rabbi to determine their status vis-ŕ-vis the Tisha B’Ab fast.

The Hid"a (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1807) ruled that those who are exempt from fasting on Tisha B’Ab may eat normally, as they wish. Tisha B’Ab differs in this respect from Yom Kippur, when ill patients who must eat are required to limit their eating and drinking to specific amounts within certain time-frames. On Tisha B’Ab, those who are exempt are permitted to eat and drink freely according to their needs.

When Tisha B’Ab falls on Mosa’eh Shabbat, as it does this year (5772), those who are exempt from fasting must first recite Habdala. As Halacha forbids eating after Shabbat before Habdala, those who are allowed to eat on Tisha B’Ab must ensure to first recite Habdala after Shabbat. They should recite the Beracha of "Ha’gefen" over a cup of wine or grape juice, followed by the Beracha of "Ha’mabdil Ben Kodesh Le’hol," and then drink a "Melo Lugmav" (cheek-full). Afterward, they are free to eat and drink as they wish.

It should be noted that those who eat bread on Tisha B’Ab do not add the paragraph of "Nahem" in Birkat Ha’mazon.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Sisit: The Number of Wrappings; Wearing a String of Techelet
The Two Aspects of Bikur Holim
Offering Spiritual Advice to an Ailing Patient
Anger and Drunkenness Lead To Sin
May a Professional Have His Secretary Type Confidential Information?
Giving Preference When Choosing From Whom to Buy
Must One Wash His Hands After a Handshake?
Haircutting and Shaving Before Praying Minha; Misvot That One Can Fulfill When Taking a Haircut
Inducing Labor Unnecessarily
Pictures of Animals on the Parochet and Walls in a Synagogue
A Proper Torah Perspective on Medical Treatment
Praying or Reciting Berachot in the Presence of Immodestly Dressed Women
The Special Prayer Recited Upon Entering and Exiting the Bet Midrash
Bizui Misva: The Prohibition Against Disrespectful Treatment of Misvot
Selling Non-Kosher Wine
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found