DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 612 KB)
Asking a Gentile to Turn Off an Alarm on Shabbat

If one’s house alarm or car alarm goes off on Shabbat, is it permissible to ask a gentile to turn off the alarm?

Generally speaking, "Amira Le’akum" – asking a gentile to perform activity that is forbidden for Jews on Shabbat – is forbidden on Shabbat by force of Rabbinic enactment. One may not ask a gentile to do on Shabbat anything that a Jew may not do on Shabbat. The Sages did, however, make several exceptions to this rule under certain circumstances, and each situation must be assessed individually to determine whether it falls under the prohibition of "Amira Le’akum."

Regarding the case of an alarm, Hacham Ovadia Yosef rules (as cited in Yalkut Yosef) that one may ask a gentile to turn off a house alarm or car alarm on Shabbat. The alarm disturbs the people in the neighborhood, including sick patients who may be unable to sleep, and could potentially cause a Hillul Hashem (desecration of God’s Name), and these concerns override the Rabbinic prohibition of "Amira Le’akum." One may thus show a gentile the button to press and explicitly ask him to shut the alarm. This applies even if the gentile will turn on a light in the process of shutting the alarm, such as if he must enter the car. The Jew’s request relates specifically to shutting the alarm, which entails only a Rabbinic prohibition (stopping an electric current), and the Torah prohibition of turning on lights occurs only as a byproduct of the primary action. One may therefore ask the gentile to turn off the alarm even if the gentile will turn on a light in the process.

Of course, if the alarm will turn itself off after a minute or two, then one should simply wait for this to happen, rather than asking a gentile to turn off the alarm. Our discussion here concerns those alarm systems that sound a siren indefinitely until the system is turned off.

Summary: If one’s car alarm or house alarm sounds on Shabbat, one may ask a gentile to turn it off. If the alarm will turn off automatically after just a couple of minutes, then one should simply wait for the alarm to turn itself off.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Covering a Pot on Shabbat
Pouring Hot Water Into Hamin (Cholent) on Shabbat
Timers on Shabbat
Taking out Bread from an Oven on Shabbat
Reheating Foods on Shabbat Containing Congealed Fat
The Kiddush of the Day For One Who Is Sick
Laws of the Morning Kiddush
The Wording of the Kiddush - Part 1 of 2
Halachot of the Meal of Se’uda Shelishit
Receiving a Phone Call Made by a Gentile From an Area Where it is Still Shabbat; Making a Phone Call Before or After Shabbat to a Place Where it is Shabbat
When does Shabbat End?
Melava Malka
Laws of Melava Malka
Stretching the Barechu on Mosa’eh Shabbat
Halachot of Oneg Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found