DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Shlomo Tawachi Ben Emilia

Dedicated By
His Family in Panama

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 360 KB)
Being a Sandak at One’s Own Son’s Berit

The Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in his work Rab Pe’alim (vol. 2, Y.D. 35), writes that it is not only permissible for a father to serve as the Sandak at his own son’s Berit, but also recommended. By holding the baby and enabling the Mohel to perform the circumcision, the Ben Ish Hai says, the Sandak is considered as having personally performed the Misva of Mila. The Gemara in Masechet Makkot establishes that if a barber removes somebody’s Pe’ot (sideburns), then both the barber and the customer have transgressed the Torah violation. The customer participated in the sinful act by moving his head and enabling the barber to remove the Pe’ot, and thus he, too, is considered as having committed the transgression. The Ben Ish Hai claims that this is true with regard to Misvot, as well. The Sandak enables the Mohel to circumcise the infant, and thus he is considered as having performed the Misva. Hence, as there is value in personally performing the Mila of one’s own son, it is recommended – at least according to the Ben Ish Hai – that a father serve as the Sandak at his son’s Berit in order to receive credit for having actually performed the Mila.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Proper Intention While Pronouncing the Letter “Dalet” in “Ehad” During Shema
Bringing Mashiah by Paying Attention to the Repetition of the Amida
Praying From a Mobile phone
Reciting Shema Right Before Sunrise
The Custom to Recite at the End of the Amida a Verse Associated With One’s Name
Explaining Why Kaddish is Mostly in Aramaic
Bringing a Sefer Torah From the Synagogue to a Private Minyan
Laws of Kaddish
Combining Two Parashiyot in the Diaspora to “Catch Up”
If Fewer Than Ten Men are Answering to Kaddish or to the Repetition of the Amida
Answering “Amen” to Birkot Ha’Torah
If One Remembered During the Beracha of “Yoser Or” That He Had Forgotten to Recite Birkot Ha’Torah
Appreciating Birkat Kohanim
Insights and Customs Relevant to the “Nishmat” Prayer
The Special Significance of the “Nishmat” Prayer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found