DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Yedidia ben Chana, David Yehoshua ben Tziporah

Dedicated By
Simantov family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 776 KB)
Borer: Selecting Clothes in a Dark Room

The Poskim deal with an interesting case of Borer, involving selecting clothes from a dark room on Shabbat. If a person has, for example, many pairs of dark colored socks-brown, black, navy etc.-and wants to select a certain color, his desired pair is not easily discernible in the dark. He must pick a random pair and hold it up to determine its color. One might argue that if he picked out the wrong color, then his selection constitutes removing P’solet (waste) from the mixture and would be a violation of Borer.

Rabbi Shlomo Miller, in his Sefer, Shabbat Shel Shlomo (p. 177), presents a number of rationales why this does not constitute Borer. First, Borer is only when one makes a Tikun of a mixture by removing definitive bad from definitive good. In this case, it is not clear that it is P’solet at the time that he removes it. He is removing it to find out which it is.

Moreover, if he would discover that it was the wrong pair, he should immediately throw it back in the drawer, which would clearly indicate that he did not perform a Tikun on the mixture. Therefore, although some Poskim argue, it is permitted to remove each pair one by one to discern whether it is the desired one, if he returns the undesired pair immediately back to the drawer.

SUMMARY
It is permitted to remove an item from a mixture to determine whether it is the desired item, if he returns it to the mixture immediately, in the event he discovers that it is not.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May A Seller Compensate For Partial Defect Or Must He Issue Full Refund?
Does A Purchaser Have The Right To Return A Defective Item
Damages Caused to a Car That is Blocking a Driveway or a Street
The Status of a Witness Who Received Money to Testify
Which Transgressions Render a Person Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Why are Women Disqualified From Serving as Witnesses?
May a Sinner Serve as a Witness If He Thought He Was Doing a Misva When He Sinned?
The Disqualification of “Shameless” People From Serving as Witnesses
Who is Disqualified From Serving as a Witness?
Watching a Lost Item Until it is Returned to its Owner
Who Keeps Money That is Found in a Private Backyard, or in a Store?
Returning and Claiming Lost Items
Hashabat Abeda – The Obligation to Return Lost Objects
Reading “Shenayim Mikra Ve’ehad Targum”
The Importance of Avoiding Anger
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found