DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 418 KB)
Is It Permissible To Use Insect Killing Spray on Shabbat

Just one Halacha on the laws of Shabbat. One of the 39 Melachot (forbidden tasks) is, ‘Shochet’. Shochet means to slaughter and it includes in that concept, the killing of any creature that has life. That would include bugs, and different types of animals. This would fall under the category of Shochet. Netilat Neshama, which is taking away the life of a living being, is clearly forbidden. So the question is, if a person is in a room and there are different bugs, and it’s disturbing him, can he take bug repellent, and spray the room to get rid of the bugs? Is this permissible on Shabbat?

According to the Halacha, it would be permissible, so long as you open a window first, and you don’t spray the spray bug repellent directly on the bugs. Which means that you are giving a chance to the bugs to escape, as they start to smell the repellent. So you are not locking them in, and you are not going to create a situation where they certainly will die.

So therefore Halacha Lema’ase (the bottom line), it would be permissible on Shabbat, to spray repellent in the air, and the bugs themselves can do what ever they want. If they want to leave, then they could leave. If they want to stay and suffer their fate, they can do that also. Therefore the Halacha, that would be the case.

Even the Chazon Ish was lenient on this only in a case where someone is sick in the room, and its creating great suffering. But there are enough Acharonim, including the Menuchat Ahava, which writes clearly, that one would be permissible to do in the way we explained.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Sephardic Custom Concerning the "Yihud" of a Bride and Groom
The Wedding Ceremony – The Proper Pronunciation of “Al Yedeh Hupa Be’kiddushin”; the Custom to Break a Glass
Reciting Sheva Berachot After Sundown of the Seventh Day After a Wedding
Reciting Sheba Berachot at a Meal That Was Not Specifically Prepared for the Bride and Groom
May a Person Who Did Not Eat at a Sheba Berachot Celebration Recite One of the Berachot?
Sheba Berachot – If Somebody Did Not Eat Bread at the Meal, Reciting the Berachot Seated
Are the Sheba Berachot Recited if the Bride and Groom Did Not Eat?
Reciting the Sheba Berachot if the Bride and Groom are Not Present
Nidda – Abstaining During “Onat Ha’hodesh” and “Onat Hahaflaga”
The Obligation to Abstain From Relations at the Time When the Wife is Likely to Become a Nidda
The “Tikkun Ha’kelali” – Repairing the Damage Caused by Making Oneself Impure
The Proper Procedure for Sheba Berachot That is Not Held in the Couple’s Home
Making Weddings at Night
Does Dandruff in the Hair Disqualify a Woman’s Immersion in a Mikveh?
Understanding The Beracha of ‘VeTzivanu Al Ha’Arayot’ At The Wedding Ceremony
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found