DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 608 KB)
Purim – Customs Relevant to Se’udat Purim

It is customary to light candles at the table for the Purim feast, even if the meal is held in the middle of the day and there is abundant sunlight, in order to give honor to the meal. The candles should be lit in honor of Mordechai and Ester. It is proper to bring Hadasim to the table and smell them before the meal, just like on Shabbat.

Although throughout the year it is proper to leave one of the dishes off the table in commemoration of the Temple’s destruction, all dishes should be brought to the table for the Purim feast, and the table should be filled with delicacies. It is customary among the "Medakdekim" (especially pious) to have fifteen foods on the table for the Purim meal, and these should include chicken or meat, as well as fish.

It is proper to celebrate the Purim meal together with one’s family, as it says in the Megila that Purim is observed by "each and every family" ("Mishpaha U’mishpaha"). Additionally, one cannot experience true joy when he is alone. Special care must be taken that the men and women do not mingle, even more so than during the rest of the year, in order to avoid improper behavior on the sacred day of Purim. If there is any concern that the celebration will lead to meaningless frivolity or impropriety, then it is better to have the meal alone and not in the company of family and friends.

(Taken from the Ben Ish Hai)

 


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