DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 944 KB)
The Beracha Recited Upon Entering a Cemetery

Many people are unaware of the fact that there is a Beracha which one must recite just before entering a cemetery. This Beracha, "Baruch Ata Hashem…Asher Yasar Etchem Ba’din…" (listen to audio recording for the full text), is recited anytime one visits a cemetery, whether he is visiting the graves of Sadikim or the graves of departed loved ones. There are also a number of Pesukim that are customarily recited after reciting the Beracha.

This Beracha is recited only if one had not visited a cemetery in the previous thirty days. Even if one visited a different cemetery within the last thirty days, he does not recite a Beracha upon the current visit. This rule, however, is subject to a number of different conditions. The Ner Le’siyon writes that the prevalent custom is to recite a Beracha if one had visited a cemetery in a different city within the previous thirty days. And thus even though one had recently visited a cemetery, he recites the Beracha again when he goes to a cemetery in a different city. Additionally, if a new grave was added, Heaven forbid, since one’s previous visit to the cemetery, then he recites the Beracha even if he had been to this cemetery within the last thirty days. For example, if a person visited a loved one’s grave after Shiba, and then returns after Sheloshim and sees that new graves have been added in the interim, then he recites the Beracha even though he had been to the cemetery just three weeks earlier. (The custom in Baghdad, as recorded by the Ben Ish Hai in Parashat Ekeb, was to never recite the Beracha when returning to a cemetery unless a new grave had been added in the interim.)

It is important to ensure to recite this Beracha when it is required. Although there are some Berachot mentioned in the Shulhan Aruch – such as the Berachot over thunder and lightning – which are not customarily recited, as noted on several occasions by the Ben Ish Hai, the Beracha over visiting a cemetery is recited according to all customs. This Beracha fulfills a Misva and also benefits the souls of those buried in the cemetery, and thus one should not deny himself or them the merit of this Beracha. In many cemeteries, this Beracha is written upon the gate or on cards by the entrance, and one should make a point of reciting it.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
How Many Men Who Have Already Prayed May be Counted For a Minyan to Allow the Repetition of the Amida?
Should One Stand When Reciting “Nishmat Kol Hai” on Shabbat Morning?
Praying & Learning While at Work
Who Receives the First Aliya if There is No Kohen in the Synagogue?
May a Kohen Refuse the First Aliya?
Must One Stop His Learning To Help Complete A Minyan
Lending & Borrowing Tefilin
The Procedure for Taking Three Steps Back After the Amida
Torah Reading – If the Oleh Recites the Wrong Beracha
If A Minyan Becomes Less Than 10 During The Reading of Sefer Torah
The Prohibition Against Leaving the Synagogue During the Torah Reading
Reciting Kaddish After the Torah Reading
Which Daily Prayers Must a Woman Recite?
The Value of Praying Where One Learns, and Praying in the Synagogue
Can Someone be Counted Towards a Minyan if He is Sleeping?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found