DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 412 KB)
Is Hallel Recited in a House of Mourning on Rosh Hodesh?

Is Hallel recited in a mourner’s home on Rosh Hodesh? Of course, we recite Hallel as part of the Rosh Hodesh prayer service, but the question arises whether this festive recitation should be omitted in a house of mourning.

The work Meir Or, which documents the customs of mourning practiced by the Syrian Jewish community, comments (on p. 62) that Hallel is recited in a house of mourning on both Rosh Hodesh and Hanukah, despite the festive nature of this recitation, for a number of reasons. First, the private mourning does not override the public festivity of Rosh Hodesh. Additionally, if Hallel was not recited in a house of mourning, people might not wish to pray there, and the mourner would thus not have a Minyan.

However, as Rav Shemuel Pinhasi (contemporary) notes in his work Haim Va’hesed (p. 144), the mourners themselves do not recite Hallel on Rosh Hodesh, and should step out into a different room during the Hallel recitation. And thus although the people praying in the house of mourning recite Hallel, the mourners themselves do not.

Summary: Hallel is recited in a house of mourning on Rosh Hodesh, but the mourners themselves do not recite Hallel.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Reciting Kaddish After Torah Learning
Must One Recite a New Beracha if He Removes His Tallit and Then Puts it On Again?
Answering “Amen” and “Baruch Hu U’baruch Shemo” During Birkat Kohanim
If One Prays Shaharit Between the Fourth and Sixth Hours of the Day
Making Up Multiple Missed Tefilot
If One Forgot to Recite Birkot Ha’shahar
The Yishtabah Prayer
If a Person Forgot to Recite “Mashib Ha’ru’ah U’morid Ha’geshem”
Birkat Kohanim – The Requirement to Recite the Beracha in a Loud Voice
May a Kohen Who Accidentally Killed Somebody Perform Birkat Kohanim?
The Seventh and Eighth Berachot of the Amida: Re’eh Na Be’onyenu and Refa’enu
Interrupting in Between “Ani Hashem Elokechem” and “Emet” at the End of Shema
Which Interruptions are Allowed During Shema and Its Blessings?
The Sephardic Custom to Gesture With One’s Hands Before the Amida
Covering One’s Eyes During the Recitation of Shema
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found