DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 502 KB)
If One Travels on Hanukah to a Place Without a Jewish Community

Generally speaking, if a person travels on Hanukah, and his wife remains home, then the wife lights the Hanukah candles at home and the husband fulfills his obligation of Hanukah candles through her lighting. He does not have to light in the place he is visiting.

However, the Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 677:3) makes an exception in the case of one who travels to a remote location where there are no Jews. A common contemporary example would be a Jew who travels to the Far East on business during Hanukah, and he thus finds himself in a place where no one is lighting Hanukah candles. In such a case, the Shulhan Aruch writes, one should light Hanukah candles, with the Berachot. A traveler fulfills his obligation with his wife’s lighting back home only if he is in a place where there are Jews lighting Hanukah candles and he thus sees the candles and participates in the Pirsumeh Nisa (publicizing of the miracle). If, however, he is in a place without any Jews, he must light his own candles, even though his wife is lighting at home, and he recites the Berachot over the lighting.

Preferably, in order to satisfy all opinions, a person in such a situation should specifically have in mind not to be covered by his wife’s lighting back home, so that he can recite the Berachot according to all views.

This is the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, as recorded in Yalkut Yosef (p. 169).

Summary: Although one who travels on Hanukah generally does not have to light Hanukah candles, as he fulfills his obligation through his wife’s lighting at home, if he is in a place with no Jews he should light Hanukah candles, with the Berachot.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Minimum Age Requirement for a Judge
Must One Immerse in a Mikveh Before Praying or Learning After Becoming Tameh?
Living in Eretz Yisrael
Giving Charity "Intelligently"
May One Recite Birkat Ha’ilanot During the Month of Adar?
Avoiding Contact With Members of the Opposite Gender
Verifying a Couple’s Status as Husband and Wife Based on a “Hazaka”
If a Woman is Widowed or Divorced While Pregnant or While Nursing an Infant
Remarrying in a Different County After Divorce or a Wife’s Death
Does the Prohibition Against Marrying an Egyptian, Edomite, Amonite or Moabite Apply Nowadays?
The History of the Prohibition Against Bigamy
If One’s Parents Disapprove of His or Her Choice of a Marriage Partner
How Many Times a Day Must a Person Stand in His Parents’ Honor?
Calling a Sinner for an Aliya to the Torah
The Daily Reading of a Verse Corresponding to One's Name
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found