DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.06 MB)
Is It Permissible to Open or Use an Already Opened Umbrella on Shabbat or Yom Tob?

The Shulhan Aruch in Siman 315 discusses the prohibition of making an Ohel (tent) on Shabbat. An Ohel is defined as space enclosed by partitions covered by a roof or overhanging to protect that which is underneath it. This protection includes, for example, providing shade from the sun or shelter from the rain. One of the most famous modern applications of this prohibition is opening and using an umbrella on Shabbat.

The Shulhan Aruch rules that a folding chair, known as a "Kiseh Traskal," may be opened on Shabbat. The Hazon Ish (Rav Abraham Yeshaya Karelitz, 1878-1953) derived from this a general principle that anything that is already built, but is merely folded or collapsed, may be opened on Shabbat, even though it forms an Ohel beneath it. Accordingly, it should follow that the Hazon Ish would permit opening an umbrella, since it is already fully assembled, and there are no pieces being added. Nevertheless, he rules that an umbrella may not be opened since it constitutes "Uvdin D’hol" (mundane activity). The Hatan Sofer also found reasons to be lenient, although his conclusion is to be strict.

The Bet Meir (Rabbi Meir Posner, 1729-1807) went so far as to actually permit opening an umbrella.

The Hida (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1807) in his Birkeh Yosef (end of 315 in the Shiyureh Beracha) cites a Posek called the Giva’at Pinhas who prohibits opening the umbrella but allows carrying an umbrella that was already open before Yom Tob.

Hacham Ovadia in Yehaveh Da’at and Hazon Ovadia (Vol. 5), as well as most contemporary Poskim, prohibit both opening and using an umbrella on Shabbat. They contend that the case of the umbrella is critically different from the case of the folding chair. The open chair does not serve the space underneath it, whereas the open umbrella is designed to protect the person beneath it.

SUMMARY
It is prohibited to open an umbrella on Shabbat and Yom Tob, as well as to use an already open umbrella.



 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Wearing the Shoes of a Deceased Person; Sleeping with Shoes; Wearing Shoes on the Wrong Feet
Hanging Flags in the Synagogue
The Parochet – The Curtain Outside the Aron
Birkat Ha’hama: One Who Sees the Sun Through Eyeglasses, or Who Sees Only a Reflection; Looking at Someone Named Abraham While Reciting the Beracha
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Indoors and in an Airplane; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama During Mourning
Training Children to Recite Birkat Ha’hama; Customs for After Birkat Ha’hama
Should Women Recite Birkat Ha’hama?
Reciting She’heheyanu Over Birkat Ha’hama
If a Berit Mila is Performed on the Day of Birkat Ha’hama; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Birkat Ha’ilanot
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Shaharit
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama on a Cloudy Day
Eating Before Reciting Birkat Ha’hama
Birkat Ha’hama- I
How Early in the Month May One Recite Birkat Halebana?
Respecting Parents-in-Law
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found