DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.07 MB)
Pesah – Does One Recite the Beracha Over Marror if He Lost His Sense of Taste?

One of the common symptoms of the coronavirus is the loss of the sense of taste. If a coronavirus patient cannot taste food, can he fulfill the Misva of Marror at the Seder on Pesah?

The answer to this question seems to emerge from the Gemara’s ruling in Masechet Pesahim that "Bala Marror Lo Yasa" – if one swallowed the Marror without first chewing it, he has not fulfilled the Misva of Marror. Although one fulfills the Misva of Masa at the Seder if he swallows the Masa without first chewing it, the Misva of Marror is not fulfilled in this fashion. The Rashbam (Rav Shemuel Ben Meir, France, 1085-1158) explains that the Misva of Marror requires one to experience a taste of "Merirut" – "bitterness" – and therefore, one who swallows the Marror without chewing, and thus does not experience the bitter taste, does not fulfill his obligation.

It would therefore seem that a person who is unable to taste food cannot fulfill the Misva of Marror. Although the patient certainly can, and perhaps should, eat the Marror, he should not recite the Beracha of "Al Achilat Marror," and should instead hear somebody else’s recitation of this Beracha.

It should be noted that a person in such a condition recites "Birkot Ha’nehenin" – the regular blessings required before eating. Although he does not enjoy the taste of the food he eats, he nevertheless experiences "Hana’at Me’ayim" (literally, "benefit of the stomach"), in that he receives nourishment and sustenance from the food, and so he recites a Beracha. The Hid"a (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1806) mentions that there were people in his day who would eat raw eggs, which has no taste, and they recited the Beracha of "She’ha’kol" before eating, because they received nourishment from the egg. By the same token, one recites a Beracha over food even if he suffers from an illness which prevents him from tasting the food.

Summary: A coronavirus patient who is unable to taste food likely cannot fulfill the Misva of Marror at the Seder, and so he should not recite the Beracha of "Al Achilat Marror." He does, however, recite the usual Berachot before eating food, even though he cannot taste it.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Can Eliyahu HaNavee Come On Shabbat?
Is It Permissible To Have A Seuda Inside A Bet Kennesset
Is It Permissible To Change Biblical Verses from Singular to Plural Form
Is It Required To Repeat The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit If Removing The Talit For Just A Short While
Is It Required To Make The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit Again If The 1st Talit Was Found To Be Pasul (Improper)
Is One Required To Stand For An Elderly Lady or Scholarly Woman
Is It Permissible To Simply Answer Amen and Rely On Another's Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit
Granting Precedence to a Jew When Hiring
Is It Permissible To Give A Non-Kosher Turkey To A Goy For Their Holiday
Yichud- 1) Must An Onen Follow The Laws of Yichud, 2) War and Yichud
Yichud- Is It Permissible For A Man To Be Alone With A Lady On An Express Elevator In A Skyscraper
Yichud- Is It Permissible to Be Alone with Mother, Father, Daughter, Son, Brother, or Sister
Tzineeut and The Proper and Improper Ways Of Socializing With Friends
How Could We Pray To G-d That Korbanot Be Accepted, When Today We Do Not Have Korbanot?
Some Laws Regarding Visiting or Seeing a Cemetery
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found