DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.3 MB)
Which Mourning Practices are Observed During Hol Ha’mo’ed?

If, Heaven forbid, a person passes away during a holiday and is buried on Hol Ha’mo’ed, the formal Shiba mourning period does not begin until after the holiday. The family members are this in a kind of in-between status during Hol Ha’mo’ed, as they do not begin formal Abelut until after the holiday. However, despite the fact that Shiba does not begin during Hol Ha’mo’ed, certain aspects of mourning are observed already at that point. Specifically, family members observe mourning practices that apply in a private setting, but not those practices which take place in public. Thus, for example, as Rav Shemuel Pinhasi writes in his work Haim Va’hesed (p. 291), a mourner may not engage in marital relations on Hol Ha’mo’ed. As for Torah study, which is generally forbidden during Abelut, Hacham Ovadia Yosef rules (in Yabia Omer, vol. 4, Yoreh De’a 31:6) that a mourner may study Torah during Hol Ha’mo’ed. The mourner may recite Hallel with the congregation in the synagogue during Hol Ha’mo’ed, as people will notice if he refrains from reciting Hallel, and this would thus be considered public mourning, which is forbidden.

Rav Pinhasi notes that in such a case, when a mourner begins Abelut after the holiday, he must remember to wear Tefillin – with a Beracha – on the first day of mourning. In circumstances when the funeral is held on the same day as the family member’s passing, one does not wear Tefillin, but in this case, when Abelut is starting several days later, Tefillin is worn, and a Beracha is recited over the Tefillin.

An interesting question arises concerning the permissibility of work during Abelut in such a case. If a family member passes away during Hol Ha’mo’ed, the mourner could end up missing over ten days of work, since he does not work on Hal Ha’mo’ed and the last days of Yom Tob, and then he is not allowed to work during the seven days of Shiba. Rabbi Pinhasi writes (p. 291, Halacha 11) that in such a case, once the mourner had refrained from work for seven days, he may during Abelut have somebody else perform his work for him, such as by opening his shop. Thus, for example, if a person missed four days of work during Hol Ha’mo’ed, and then two days of Yom Tob, already the second day of Shiba he may have somebody do his work for him so that he does not suffer a serious financial loss.

Summary: If one’s family member passes away, Heaven forbid, during a holiday, formal Abelut begins only after the holiday. On Hol Ha’mo’ed, the mourner may not engage in marital relations, but he may study Torah and pray normally in the synagogue, including the recitation of Hallel. During Shiba in this case, he may have somebody perform his work for him – such as run his store – once he had already missed seven days of work because of his mourning observance.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Lag Ba’omer – The Reasons for Celebrating; Reciting Yehi Shem, Visiting Meron, and Other Customs
The Custom of Giving a Boy His First Haircut at Age Three
Visiting Meron on Lag Ba’omer
Lag Ba’omer – Shaving on Friday When Lag Ba’omer Falls on Sunday; The Reason for Celebrating; Fasts, Eulogies and Tahanunim on Lag Ba’omer
Shaving and Haircutting on Lag Ba'omer That Occurs on Friday
Is It Permissible for Sephardim To Take A Hair Cut On The 33rd Day Of The Omer When The 34th Day Falls Out On Shabbat
Sefirat Ha'omer – A Person Who is Unsure Whether He Counted
May Women and Children Take Haircuts During the Omer Period?
Sefirat Ha'omer – May Women Count the Omer?
If a Person Reads a Text Message Informing Him of the Omer Counting, May He Still Count with a Beracha?
Sefirat Ha’omer – The Proper Way to Respond if Somebody Asks Which Day to Count
Guidelines for One Who Forgets to Count the Omer or Cannot Remember if He Counted
Sefirat HaOmer: If One Counted the Days but Not the Weeks
Sefirat Ha’omer – If a Person Counted Either the Days or Weeks Incorrectly
If One Forgets or Doesn't Remember If He Counted The Omer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found