DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 838 KB)
Is One Required To Stand During Kaddish

Is one required to stand during the recitation of Kaddish?

The Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Poland, 1525-1572), in his glosses to the Shulchan Aruch (56, Halacha 1), writes that it is proper to stand during the recitation of Kaddish, and this is indeed the practice of the Ashkenazim, to remain standing throughout the entire recitation of every Kaddish. This ruling evolves from a comment in the Talmud Yerushalmi concerning the story recorded in Sefer Shoftim (chapter 3) of the judge Ehud Ben Gera. Ehud visited Eglon, king of Moav, and said to him, "I have for you a word from God" (Shoftim 3:20), at which point Eglon immediately rose from his chair. The Yerushalmi derives from this incident that it is proper to stand upon hearing the Name of God. Accordingly, the Ashkenazim make a point of standing during the recitation of Kaddish, when we give praise to the Name of God ("Yehei Shemei Rabba Mevarach…").

The Arizal, however, followed a different practice, standing during Kaddish only if he had been standing previously. (Pri Etz Hayim Shaare HaKadishim) This is, indeed, the custom of the Sepharadim, to remain standing if one had been standing before Kaddish, and to remain seated if one had been sitting before Kaddish. And, unlike the Ashkenazim, who remain standing throughout the entirety of Kaddish, Sepharadim stand (when they had been standing before Kaddish) only through the response of "Yehei Shemei Rabba…" (until "Da'amiran Be'alma"). (Halacha Berura, Helek 4, page 205)

Chacham Baruch Refael Ben-Hayim ruled that this obligation to remain standing during Kaddish applies even if the Chazan sings the Kaddish, as is common on Shabbat and Yom Tov.

Some Sepharadim have the custom to stand for Kaddish recitation during the Friday night service, in honor of the "Neshama Yeteira" ("additional soul") that envelops a person during the recitations of Borchu and Kaddish on Friday night. (Chacham Baruch Refael Ben-Chayim advised that one should make a point of standing at least during the recitation of Barechu on Friday night.)

It is improper to rush to one's seat immediately before Kaddish to avoid the need to stand during Kaddish. A person who is standing before Kaddish should not specifically sit just before Kaddish, but should rather remain standing. We must therefore question the practice of many people to rush to their seats on Friday night after the Chazan recites the Beracha "Mekadesh Ha'Shabbat" (at the conclusion of "Magen Avot") to avoid having to stand during Kaddish. (Ben Ish Hai, Parashat Vayehi, and Halichot Olam)

Summary: Ashkenazim follow the practice of standing throughout every Kaddish recitation, whereas Sepharadim stand only through the response of "Yehei Shemei Rabba" and only if one had been standing before Kaddish. Some Sepharadim have the practice to stand for Kaddish recitation during the Friday night service. It is inappropriate to rush to one's seat before Kaddish to avoid standing during the recitation of Kaddish.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah – The Time for Bedikat Hames
Pesah- The Procedure for Bedikat Hamez
Pesah – Must One Search for Hames in the Areas Containing the Hames That He Sells?
The Special Reading on the First Thirteen Days of Nissan
Pesah – Is it Permissible to Eat Egg Masa on Pesah
Passover- Ve'higadeta Le'bincha - Sitting Next To One's Father-Son During The Hagaddah
Must One Perform Bedikat Hametz if He Goes Away for Pesah?
Pesah – Reciting Me’en Sheba on Pesah Night When it Falls on Shabbat
The Reasons for the Custom of Ta'anit Bechorim
Passover- Avoiding The Problem of A Drop of Hametz In Kosher for Pesach Food
Shabbat Hagadol
Pesah – Selling Hametz in a Case Where One Spends Pesah in a Different Time Zone
Pesah – The Second of the Four Cups of Wine
Laws and Customs of Ereb Pesah
Kimha De’pischa – Donating Charity to the Poor Before Pesah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found