DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 596 KB)
Hanukah – Where Should a Guest Light if He Will be Returning Home That Night?

It is quite common for young couples to go away for Shabbat Hanukah to their parents, and then return home on Mosa’eh Shabbat. It is clear that if a guest stays overnight in his host’s home, he is considered part of the household and thus fulfills his Misva through the host’s lighting; he simply asks the host to have him in mind when he lights. (Some guests also give the host some small change to purchase a share in the oil and wicks, but strictly speaking this is probably not necessary.) The more complex question is how the couple fulfills the Misva on Mosa’eh Shabbat. In many cases, the couple is still in the parents’ home when the parents light the Hanukah candles, and they stick around for Melaveh Malka and then go home. One might assume that since they are still guests in the parents’ home when the parents light the candles, they fulfill the Misva through the parents’ lighting, just as on Friday night. This is, indeed the ruling of Rav Yaakov Kaminetsky (1891-1986), in his Emet Le’Yaakob, and of Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (1910-1995).

Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, cites the ruling of the Mahari Katz (a contemporary of the Rama, in Poland) that the Misva of lighting depends upon where a person sleeps. And therefore Hacham Ovadia rules that even though the couple is with their parents at the time the parents light, and the parents have them in mind, they must nevertheless light the Hanukah candles when they return home. Even if they will be returning home late, nowadays one may light the Hanukah candles in the late-night hours because in any event most people light indoors. This ruling is recorded in Hazon Ovadia – Hanukah (p. 155; listen to audio recording for precise citation).

Summary: A Shabbat guest who returns home on Mosa’eh Shabbat should light the Hanukah candles at home, even if he returns home late, and he does not fulfill the Misva through his host’s lighting, even if he is still in his host’s home at the time of lighting.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Hanukah – One Who Cannot Afford Enough Oil for the Hanukah Candles
Hanukah – Eulogies, Fasting and Visiting Cemeteries During Hanukah
The Beracha Recited Before and After One Eats a Jelly Donut; Placing a Jelly Donut on a Hot Plate on Shabbat
Chanukah- Where Should the Menorah in the Synagogue be Positioned
Chanukah- Should One Continue To Light If He Missed Lighting The Night Before
The Custom to Eat Cheese on Hanukah; Reciting a Beracha When Eating Cheese on a Cracker
Chanukah- Guidelines Concerning Situations Where a Congregation Read the Wrong Selection from the Torah During Chanukah
Chanukah- Warming Fried Jelly Doughnuts on Shabbat & A Mourner's Participation in Chanukah Celebrations
Chanukah- In The Event You Forgot Sh’hecheyanu The First Night
Chanukah- Do We Repeat All 3 Berachot When Lighting In The Synagogue On The First Night of Chanukah?
Chanukah- When Is It Permissible To Recite Hallel
Mincha Erev Shabbat When The First Night of Chanukah Occurs on Friday Night
Chanukah- Should One Light When In A Place Full of Goyim Even If His Wife Lights In His Stead At Home
For How Long Must the Chanukah Candles Burn in the Synagogue?
Chanukah- Should One Still Recite She'hecheyanu If Lighting After A Person Lit In His Stead On The First Night
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found