DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.75 MB)
Amira L'Akum: Instructing a Non-Jew to Draw Hot Water

The Halacha permits instructing a non-Jew to do an act known as a "P’sik Resheh"- a permitted action that causes an inevitable automatic violation of Shabbat. For example, it is permitted to tell a non-Jew to open a refrigerator door, even though, inevitably, the light will turn on.

This principle can be applied to taking hot water from an urn which has an automatic refill function. That is, whenever the mechanism is used to draw hot water into a cup, cold water is automatically streamed into the heating chamber to be heated. Clearly, a Jew is prohibited from using such an urn, since every time he takes hot-water, he is doing a "P'sik Resheh" of cooking the new water. However, based on the aforementioned principle, it is permissible to tell the non-Jew to pour a cup of hot water.

Similarly, it is forbidden to turn on the hot water in a sink on Shabbat. Even if all the water currently in the tank is heated from before Shabbat, nevertheless, as hot water is drawn from the sink, new cold water is pumped into the tank and is heated on Shabbat. The fact that this process is not seen makes absolutely no difference. Nobody would think that is permissible to turn on a light on Shabbat with their eyes closed! Since this is a "P'sik Resheh," one may instruct a non-Jew to turn on the hot water faucet. If the cold water intake valve was shut before Shabbat, it is permitted even for a Jew to turn on the hot water.

This leniency can also be applied to Yom Tob. Although on Yom Tob, as opposed to Shabbat, it is permitted to wash the entire body in hot water, nevertheless, it is still prohibited to heat the water for that purpose. Therefore, one may ask a non-Jew to turn on the hot water of a shower on Yom Tob, in order to wash oneself.

SUMMARY
A Jew is prohibited from turning on the hot water faucet on Shabbat, but he may instruct a non-Jew to do so.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Reciting "Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto" Silently
Visiting the Sick and Comforting the Mourner: Which Takes Precedence?
“Berachot Parties” to Bring Merit to Ill Patients
Some Laws and Customs of Traveling
Avoiding Anger
Shobabim – Suggestions for Maintaining a State of Purity and Avoiding Sin
May Birkat Halebana be Recited When the Moon is Covered by a Thin Layer of Cloud?
Yihud – Driving in a Car with Tinted Windows or Curtains Over the Windows
Saying "God Willing" Before Every Undertaking; the Delicate Balance Between Effort and Excessive Work (Work-A-Holics)
Some Rules About Counting Jewish Persons
The Issue of Gambling
May a Man and Woman Drive Alone Together in a Car?
Is it Improper to Date a Girl Who Has an Older Unmarried Sister?
Convening a Bet Din and Incarcerating Criminals on Shabbat
Washing One's Hands After a Haircut or After Nail-Cutting
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found