DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 710 KB)
Must One Make New Berachot if He Went to the Facilities During a Meal?

***

We ask our iTorah followers to support the ZION CHILDREN’S ORPHANAGE OF JERUSALEM. Zion Orphanage, founded in 1899 in Jerusalem, is the world's oldest continuously running Jewish orphanage and is a recognized leader in orphan care. At their campus in central Jerusalem, they provide 180 disadvantaged and homeless youth, ages 8-22, with the warmth and care of a loving family. They are proud to count some of Israel's brightest and best among their alumni: Knesset members, business leaders, and renowned professionals.

Please support this wonderful institution: www.zionorphanage.com

***


The Rema in Siman 178 brings the Halacha of Berachot when a person goes to the bathroom in the middle of a meal. He rules that when he comes back, he does not have to make new Berachot.

The Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan of Radin, 1839-1933) understands this ruling to refer to a case where the person was eating bread. He views this case as an application of the general Halacha of Shinui Makom: When a person left his location while eating a meal with bread, he does not have to repeat the Beracha when he returns. Going to the bathroom follows the same rule as any other leaving his place. Therefore, if one ate fruit, going to the bathroom would constitute a change in location and require new Berachot when he returned. All this would apply in the olden days, when going to the bathroom entailed leaving one’s house. Therefore, nowadays that we have indoor plumbing, going to the bathroom is not a Shinui Makom and does not require making new Berachot, even when eating fruit and the like.

However, the Halachot Gedolot rules that even when eating bread, going to the bathroom constitutes an interruption, even if the bathroom is in the same house. Since one may not recite Berachot in the bathroom, entering that space severs the connection to the original Berachot, and one must recite new Berachot when he returns.

At the other extreme, Rabbi Ya’akob Castro (1525-1610, Egypt) rules that going to the bathroom never constitutes an interruption, even when using facilities outside the house. The change in location is considered a natural part of the meal since doing so is a natural and necessary bodily function.

This difference of opinion creates a Safek Berachot, an uncertainty with regard to making a Beracha. In such cases, the general Halachic principle dictates to be lenient and refrain from making a Beracha upon returning to a meal after using the bathroom.

SUMMARY
One should not make a new Beracha when returning to eat after using the bathroom.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is It Permissible to Spread a Talet Over the Children on Simhat Torah?
Is It Permissible On Shabbat To Walk On Grass Or To Have A Picnic On Grass
Reading Shir Hashirim on Ereb Shabbat
Peeling a Hardboiled Egg on Shabbat
Inflating a Ball on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Repair Eye Glasses on Shabbat
Walking in a Public Domain on Shabbat With Food in One's Mouth
Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Cut Tissue Paper; Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Turn on a Light for a Frightened Child
Mukse- If a Base for a Mukse Item Also Holds a Non-Mukse Item
Mukse- Handling a Corpse on Shabbat
If Part of A Utensil or A Button Becomes Detached on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Move Frozen Meat On Shabbat Or Is It Muktze
Mukse – the Status of Chicken Bones and Eggshells
Collecting Candies That Were Thrown in the Synagogue on Shabbat
Mukse: Placing Empty Shells on a Plate
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found