DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 532 KB)
Tisha B’Ab – Must One Stand in Honor of His Father or Rabbi on Tisha B’Ab?

The obligation of "Mipeneh Seba Takum Ve’hadarta Peneh Zaken" requires one to stand as an expression of honor when his father or Rabbi walks into the room. (This is also required when an elderly person walks into the room; this applies to people aged 70 and above, according to the Shulhan Aruch, or 60 and above, according to the Ben Ish Hai.) However, the Rama (Rav Moshe Isserles of Cracow, 1525-1572), in Yoreh De’a (376:2), rules that this requirement does not apply to a person in mourning. If a person’s father or Rabbi walks into the room while he observes Shiba, he does not have to stand to show honor. The reason is that the father or Rabbi presumably foregoes on this honor in consideration of the individual’s plight. Since he is in mourning, there is no expectation that he should rise to give honor.

This exemption does not apply to our state of mourning on Tisha B’Ab. If a person’s Rabbi or father walks into the room on Tisha B’Ab, he must stand, despite the fact that we are all considered mourners on this day. The exemption for a mourner stems from the fact that the mourner is in an especially difficult condition, whereas his father or Rabbi is not, and it can therefore be assumed that there is no expectation of honor. However, on Tisha B’Ab, we are all in a state of mourning, and thus no person is experiencing especially difficult hardship beyond that which his father or Rabbi experiences. Hence, it cannot be presumed that the obligation of honor is waived, and thus one must stand for his Rabbi or father on Tisha B’Ab.

Summary: Although a mourner is exempt from the obligation to stand as a show of honor when his father or Rabbi enters the room, we are required to stand in their honor on Tisha B’Ab, despite the fact that we are all considered mourners.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah- The Water Used for Baking Masa
Pesah – Koshering a Blender
Pesah – Koshering Silverware, Oversize Pots, and Meat and Dairy Utensils Together
Pesah- May One Eat Egg Masa on Pesah?
Stocking Up on Hametz Before Pesah In the Year 5780/2020
Ta’anit Bechorot During the Coronavirus Pandemic
If One Has New Utensils Which He is Unable to Immerse
Pesah – If One Mistakenly Cooked Food on Pesah in a Hametz Pot
Passover- Laws of Mechirat Hametz
Pesah: Dipping Meat and Dairy Utensils into Ha’agalah Together
Pesah: Various Halachot About Ha’agalah for Pesah
Nissan – Tikun Hasot, Fasting, Visiting Cemeteries, Ma’ot Hittim
Pesah – The Proper Way to Eat Masa at the Seder
Ereb Pesah – Ta’anit Bechorot for Women, Halachot of the Siyum
Pesah – If a Person Forgot to Lean When Eating Masa or Drinking One of the Cups of Wine
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found