DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For The Hatzlacha of
 Chana Aminov
"Mazal Tov Chana, on the birth of a baby girl! May she bring lots of Nachas to the parents, grandparents and all of Klal Israel. May both of you always be happy and healthy."

Dedicated By
Aminova Family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 932 KB)
Hanukah – The Use of Floating Wicks

There is a Misva Min Ha’mubar (higher standard of Misva performance) to use olive oil for the Hanukah lights, as olive oil is what was used for the kindling of the Menorah in the Bet Ha’mikdash, which we commemorate through our lighting.

People who wish to fulfill this higher standard generally use floating wicks. The wicks are glazed with a coating of wax so that they are stiff and can easily be inserted through the small hole in the accompanying cork. The cork with the wick is then placed in the oil cup, and it floats in the oil.

Some have raised the question of whether one indeed fulfills the Misva Min Ha’mubhar by lighting these floating wicks in oil. One fulfills the Misva of Hanukah candles through the lighting of the candles, at the moment of lighting, by lighting the candles in a manner in which they can continue burning for a half-hour; even if they are extinguished within a half-hour, the Misva is fulfilled as long as the candles were lit under suitable conditions (a rule known as "Kabeta En Zakuk Lah"). When one uses a floating wick, for at least the first 5-10 seconds or so, the flame is fueled by the wax on the wick, and not by the olive oil. It is only after all the wax on the wick has melted that the olive oil sustains the fire. One could therefore argue that since the critical moment is the moment of lighting, and at that time the flame is fueled by the wax, not the oil, the Misva Min Ha’mubhar is not fulfilled when lighting a floating wick.

Therefore, some Medakdekim (people who are especially meticulous in their Halachic observance) make a point of first lighting the wicks to melt the wax before lighting them for the Misva, or scrape the wax off the candle (though this is very difficult to do). This way, the flame is fueled by the oil already at the moment the candle is lit. (It should be noted that submerging the wick in oil before lighting will not solve this problem, because the flame will then be caught by oil, and not a wick, as required by Halacha.)

Of course, this applies only on the level of Misva Min Ha’mubhar, and for those who wish to ensure the very highest standards of performing the Misva. Our candle lighting on Hanukah is already far beyond the minimum strict obligation, which requires lighting just one candle of any kind. As it is, we perform the Misva on the standard of "Mehadrin Min Ha’mehadrin" by adding a candle each night. But in the spirit of "Hidur" (higher standards of Misva observance), which is very prominent in the context of the Misva of Hanukah, it would be preferable, if possible, to ensure to remove the wax from the floating wicks before lighting.

Summary: The Misva of Hanukah candle lighting is performed at a higher standard by using olive oil. If one uses wax-coated floating wicks for the lighting, it is preferable, if possible, to first light the wicks to melt the wax coating before lighting them for the Misva.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Beracha Recited Over Falafel, Fruit Roll Ups (Amardin) and Sesame Candies
The Beracha Acharona if Eating Half Measure of Fruit from Outside of Israel and Half Measure from Israel
What Is The Beracha on Vegetable Soup
What is the Beracha for Bread Dipped In Soup
What is the Beracha on a Calzone
What is The Beracha Rishona and Acharona on Bourekas
Reciting Birkat Ha’gomel After Air Travel
The Beracha for Coconut Milk and Fruit Juices
What is The Minimum Quantity of Wine for the Beracha of “Ha’tov V’hametiv?”
The Beracha of “Hatov V’hametiv
If One Remembers That He Forgot to Make a Beracha While Drinking
Does The Beracha HaGefen Cover All Beverages
Does the Beracha of HaMotzih Cover Beverages
Which Beracha Goes First: Boreh Peri Ha’adama or Ha’etz or Shehakol?
Interruptions After Reciting a Beracha of HaGefen
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found