DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 350 KB)
Tisha BeAv- The Prohibition Taking Hair Cuts, and Cutting Nails During The Week of Tisha BeAv

Just a few laws that will take effect during the week of Tisha BeAv, which begins on the Motzae Shabbat before the day of Tisha BeAv. Halacha does say that since it is the strongest of the mourning periods, which is the escalated level of the mourning period as we get closer to Tisha Beav, it is not permitted to take hair cuts, nor is it permitted to shave during the week of Tisha BeAv. Now, this includes the prohibition to children also. They should not take hair cuts. However, ladies would be permissible in cutting their hair during the week of Tisha BeAv. Chachamim did not make a decree on them.

Regarding cutting nails. If a person’s nails are a little long, which is above the skin line, Halacha says that it is permissible to cut them during the week of Tisha BeAv. Preferably, one should cut their nails anyway for Shabbat, and therefore they can get around all problems and fulfill a Mitzvah. But if during the week, somehow the nails are a little long, so it would be permissible to cut them during the week of Tisha BeAv.

Ladies that are going to the Mikveh during the week of Tisha BeAv, can cut their nails under all circumstances.

A man that has a mustache that is a little long, that’s interfering with his eating, it is permissible to trim it also in order to alleviate him, to eat comfortably.

***It should be pointed out that these halachot apply when Tisha BeAv falls out Monday-Thursday and not Motsei Shabbat.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Simhat Hatan Ve’kala – Bringing Joy to a Bride and Groom at Their Wedding
Are Sheba Berachot Recited for a Second Marriage?
Should Weddings be Scheduled Specifically During the First Half of the Month?
Understanding the Nature of Birkat Erusin
Under What Circumstances Does a Forbidden Marriage Take Effect?
Marrying One’s Wife’s Sister After Death or Divorce
May the Daughter of a Jewish Woman and Non-Jewish Father Marry a Kohen?
Situations Where a Pregnant or Nursing Woman May Remarry Immediately After Being Widowed or Divorced
Under What Circumstances May a Divorced Couple Remarry?
How Soon May a Widow or Divorcee Begin Dating?
The Importance of Following the Proper Halachic Procedures When Getting Divorced
Peru U’r’bu – Marrying an Infertile Woman; Delaying Marriage; Adopting Orphans; If a Convert Had Children Before Conversion
Nidda – The Inspections During the “Seven Clean Days”
The Prohibition of Relations With a Non-Jewish Woman, and With One’s Wife’s Immediate Relatives
Nidda – When is the Proper Time of Day For the Hefsek Tahara Inspection?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found