DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 776 KB)
Shinui Makom – If One Left While Eating a Mezonot Food or a Fruit From the Seven Species

In earlier editions of Daily Halacha, we saw a distinction between bread and foods requiring "Boreh Nefashot" with regard to one who leaves in the middle of a meal. If one leaves after eating bread, before reciting Birkat Ha’mazon, he does not have to recite a new Beracha when he resumes eating. Since he is required to recite Birkat Ha’mazon in the place where he ate, this obligation "binds" him to his original location even after he leaves. By contrast, "Boreh Nefashot" does not have to be recited in the place where one ate, and thus after he leaves, he has disrupted his meal and must recite a new Beracha when he resumes eating, whether this occurs in his new location or when he returns to his original location.

The third category of food which needs to be discussed is food requiring "Me’en Shalosh" – meaning, foods which require one to recite "Al Ha’mihya" (such as cake and the like), or fruit from the seven special species, which require one to recite "Al Ha’etz" (such as grapes). "Me’en Shalosh" resembles Birkat Ha’mazon in that it must be recited in the place where one ate, and it thus stands to reason that if a person left before reciting "Me’en Shalosh," he does not have to recite a new Beracha ("Mezonot" or "Boreh Peri Ha’etz") when he resumes eating. His obligation to recite a Beracha Aharona in his original location "binds" him to that location, and therefore he does not have to recite a new Beracha if he wishes to resume eating. Although some Halachic authorities dispute this line of reasoning, we follow the famous rule of "Safek Berachot Le’hakel" (one does not recite a Beracha in situations of Halachic uncertainty), and thus no Beracha is recited in such a case. This is the view of the Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), as well as of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Halichot Olam.

It must be emphasized that one should avoid this situation and not leave before reciting a Beracha Aharona, as by doing so he puts himself in a situation of Halachic controversy. But if one did leave before reciting "Al Ha’mihya" or "Al Ha’etz," he does not recite a Beracha when he resumes eating.

If one left after eating less than a Ke’zayit of "Mezonot" food or fruit from the seven species, then he would have to recite a new Beracha before he resumes eating. Since he left before he became obligated to recite a Beracha Aharona, there is no obligation connecting him to his original location after he leaves, and thus he must recite a new Beracha.

These Halachot appear in Yalkut Yosef – Berachot, p. 81 (listen to audio recording for precise citation).

Summary: If a person ate a food requiring "Al Ha’mihya" or "Al Ha’etz," he should not leave before reciting the Beracha Aharona, but if he did, he does not recite a new Beracha before he resumes eating. If, however, he left before eating a Ke’zayit, then he must recite a new Beracha before he resumes eating.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah – The Time for Bedikat Hames
Pesah- The Procedure for Bedikat Hamez
Pesah – Must One Search for Hames in the Areas Containing the Hames That He Sells?
The Special Reading on the First Thirteen Days of Nissan
Pesah – Is it Permissible to Eat Egg Masa on Pesah
Passover- Ve'higadeta Le'bincha - Sitting Next To One's Father-Son During The Hagaddah
Must One Perform Bedikat Hametz if He Goes Away for Pesah?
Pesah – Reciting Me’en Sheba on Pesah Night When it Falls on Shabbat
The Reasons for the Custom of Ta'anit Bechorim
Passover- Avoiding The Problem of A Drop of Hametz In Kosher for Pesach Food
Shabbat Hagadol
Pesah – Selling Hametz in a Case Where One Spends Pesah in a Different Time Zone
Pesah – The Second of the Four Cups of Wine
Laws and Customs of Ereb Pesah
Kimha De’pischa – Donating Charity to the Poor Before Pesah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found