DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 440 KB)
Must One Wash His Hands After a Handshake?

Rav Haim Palachi (Turkey, 1788-1869), in a number of his works (Leb Haim, Ruah Haim and Kaf Ha’haim), cites a source from the Zohar indicating that gentiles transmit Tum’a (the Halachic status of ritual impurity) even while they are alive. As such, anytime one touches the body of a gentile, even if he simply shakes the gentile’s hand, he must wash his hands to rid them of this status of Tum’a.

However, the Peri Megadim (Rabbi Yosef Teomim, 1727-1792) noted that the widespread practice is to be lenient in this regard, and not to require washing after shaking hands or having any other contact with a non-Jew. The reason is that the formal Halachic status of ritual impurity is something that applies only to Jews. Tum’a has the potential to surface only when there is Kedusha (sanctity), and thus only Jews, who are endowed with the status of Kedushat Yisrael, are subject to the Halachic status of Tum’a.

As a practical matter, it would of course be very difficult to wash one’s hands after every time he shakes hands with a gentile, and one may therefore certainly rely on the prevalent custom not to require hand washing. Of course, one who can follow the stringent view of Rav Haim Palachi may do so, though obviously this should not be done publicly, in order to avoid enmity and ill-will between us and our non-Jewish neighbors and acquaintances.

It should be noted that one who, for whatever reason, goes to a non-Jewish cemetery must wash his hands after leaving the cemetery.

Summary: One must wash his hands after leaving a non-Jewish cemetery, but washing is not required after touching a living non-Jewish person, such as after a handshake.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Visiting the Sick and Comforting Mourners on Shabbat
Crushing Ice or Sugar Cubes on Shabbat
The Recitation of “Nishmat” on Shabbat Morning
Does a Woman Recite Shehehiyanu the First Time She Lights Shabbat Candles?
Reading by an Electric Light on Shabbat
The Importance of Tosefet Shabbat – Adding Time Onto Shabbat
Oneg Shabbat – Enjoying Oneself on Shabbat
Reheating Cold Liquid on Shabbat
Announcing a Lost Mukseh Item on Shabbat
If the Person Who Recites Kiddush Speaks Before Drinking the Wine
May a Husband Repeat Habdala For His Wife if He Had Recited it in the Synagogue?
Is it Permissible to Add Hot Water to a Pot of Dry Hamin on Shabbat?
Using a Crockpot on Shabbat
Placing Food Wrapped in Tin Foil on a Blech Before Shabbat
The Requirement to Eat Immediately After Kiddush
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found