DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Refael Edmond Ezra Safra ben Esther A

Dedicated By
The Edmond J Safra Synagogue, Brooklyn NY

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 706 KB)
Hanukah – The Order of Preference When Choosing a Menorah; Using Coagulated Oil

The Hesed Le’Abraham (Rav Abraham Azulai, 1570-1643) writes (in chapter 55) that the most preferred Menorah for the Hanukah candle lighting is a gold Menorah, and the second most preferred is a silver Menorah. After silver, he writes, the order of preference is as follows: bronze, copper, iron, tin, lead, glass, wood, bone, glazed porcelain, unglazed porcelain, pomegranate shell, coconut shell and acorn shell.

If one has a silver Menorah with glass cups in which the wicks are lit, he is considered to have lit in a silver Menorah, and not in a glass Menorah. Since this is the standard, accepted manner of using a silver Menorah, the fact that the wick is lit in a glass cup does not mean that one has not used a silver Menorah. This is the ruling of Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Israel, 1910-1995).

Today many people use prepared jars of oil which is coagulated so it does not spill. After the wick it kindled, the oil gradually begins transforming back into a liquid. Rav Yosef Shalom Elyashiv (Israel, 1910-2012) ruled that this oil may be used, despite the fact that it contains a coagulant, because the coagulant comprises less than one-sixtieth of the mixture, and is thus considered Battel ("nullified"). Rabbi Bitan, in Yalkut Yosef (p. 118), adds another reason why such oil is acceptable for the Misva. He cites the work Teshuva Me’ahaba as claiming, based on several sources, that the oil used by the Hashmonaim was solidified and not a liquid. Thus, it is certainly permissible to use coagulated oil, which more closely resembles the oil kindled by the Hashmonaim in the Bet Ha’mikdash.

Summary: The most preferred kind of Menorah used on Hanukah is a gold Menorah. After gold, the order of preference is silver, bronze, copper, iron, tin, lead, glass, wood, bone, glazed porcelain and unglazed porcelain. One is credited with using a gold or silver Menorah even if the wick is lit in a glass cup. Oil containing a coagulant may be used for the Hanukah candle lighting.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May One Ask a Non-Jew to Turn Off a Light on Shabbat?
Asking a Non-Jew to Move a Mukseh Item on Shabbat
Shabbat – If a Non-Jew Mistakenly Turned Off a Light and Then Turned It Back on for a Jew
Asking a Non-Jew to Turn on the Heat or Air Conditioning on Shabbat
If a Non-Jew is Paid to Turn Lights on For a Jew on Shabbat
Giving Precedence to the Shabbat Day Meal Over the Friday Night Meal
Shabbat – The Prohibition Against Eating and Drinking Before Kiddush on Friday Night
Minors Eating Before Kiddush on Friday Night; Eating During Ben Ha’shemashot
Eating and Drinking Before Shaharit, and Before Kiddush on Shabbat
Reciting Kiddush Along With Somebody Else
A Woman’s Obligation of Kiddush
During Which Shabbat Meal Should One Eat His Favorite Food?
May One Wear a Surgical Mask on Shabbat in a Public Domain?
Is it Permissible to Use a Water Filter on Shabbat?
Covering the Bread on the Table for Kiddush and Habdala
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found