DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 662 KB)
Tisha BeAv- Seudat Hamafseket (The Last Meal Before The Fast)

Regarding the Seudat Hamafseket, which is the Seuda (meal) that is eaten right before the fast of Tisha BeAv. There are some restrictions that are made how to eat that meal. The reasons these restrictions were made was because it was at that time when the enemies entered the Bet Hamikdash, and they started eating and drinking, and they started reveling, and therefore to remember what they did, so we minimize our pleasure and we limit our eating before the fast. And therefore, Halacha says, that the Seuda right before the fast, we should only eat one cooked food, and not more.

One cooked food would mean ,for example a food that’s normally cooked together, even if it has 2 items in the food. For example, Majedra (rice with lentils), even though technically it’s rice and it’s lentils, since it’s cooked together, that would be considered one cooked food.

Halacha tells us that bread with the Seuda is not considered a cooked food. So bread with a cooked food would be considered permissible.

Some people have a question regarding pickles and things like that, which are put into vinegar for a time. Halacha says pickled items are also considered like cooked. So technically if a person has a pickle during the Seuda Mafseket, so that’s his item.

In any event, there are some opinions that are even more stringent, on let’s say a cup of coffee, which is cooked, and it becomes the one item. So therefore a custom evolved, to have a meal prior to the Seudat Hamafseket. Which means a Seuda in order to eat whatever you like. And then when you get close to the time of the fast, then already you sit down and have a piece of bread with a little salt, or some have the custom to have a hard boiled egg. Some people even have the custom to sit on the floor in Derech Avelut (the way of mourning). So having a meal prior would be a way, not to get around it, but it’s a legal way to have an official Seuda before hand. Do not fill yourself up obviously at that early meal. Finish that meal, and then take a walk and come back, and then have the official Seuda Hamafseket with one cooked item.

It should be pointed out that there is no Zimun when 3 men are sitting together at Seudat Hamafseket. It’s not a festive meal where you get together. On the contrary, it’s considered as if a person is eating on his own. The Birkat Hamazon at the Seudat Hamafseket is the regular Birkat Hamazon. There are no additions commemorating Jerusalem at the Birkat Hamazon of Seudat Hamafseket.

***It should be pointed out that this Halacha applies when Tisha BeAv falls out Monday-Thursday and not Motsei Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
How Many Men Who Have Already Prayed May be Counted For a Minyan to Allow the Repetition of the Amida?
Should One Stand When Reciting “Nishmat Kol Hai” on Shabbat Morning?
Praying & Learning While at Work
Who Receives the First Aliya if There is No Kohen in the Synagogue?
May a Kohen Refuse the First Aliya?
Must One Stop His Learning To Help Complete A Minyan
Lending & Borrowing Tefilin
The Procedure for Taking Three Steps Back After the Amida
Torah Reading – If the Oleh Recites the Wrong Beracha
If A Minyan Becomes Less Than 10 During The Reading of Sefer Torah
The Prohibition Against Leaving the Synagogue During the Torah Reading
Reciting Kaddish After the Torah Reading
Which Daily Prayers Must a Woman Recite?
The Value of Praying Where One Learns, and Praying in the Synagogue
Can Someone be Counted Towards a Minyan if He is Sleeping?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found