DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 954 KB)
Swimming on Shabbat

Is it permissible to swim on Shabbat, and what Halachic issues may be entailed?

Before proceeding to answer this question, we must clarify that we deal with a private pool, where only men or only women swim. Mixed swimming is strictly forbidden any day of the week, both on Shabbat and weekdays. Our entire discussion here refers only to separate swimming.

Furthermore, we discuss here only a pool situated in a Reshut Ha’yahid (private domain), where one does not violate the prohibition of carrying on Shabbat. One may certainly not swim in a pool situated in a public area, as he would be in violation of Shabbat by the fact that he carries water as he swims.

In addition, we deal here with a pool containing cold water. It is forbidden on Shabbat to bathe in heated water, even if the water is only lukewarm. Hence, the question regarding swimming on Shabbat arises only when dealing with separate swimming in a pool situated in a private domain and that contains only cold water.

The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 339) rules that, strictly speaking, it is permissible to swim on Shabbat in a pool that is entirely surrounded by walls, as our pools are. This is as opposed to swimming in a river, which is forbidden on Shabbat.

Nevertheless, all contemporary and recent Halachic authorities unanimously rule that one should not swim on Shabbat. As several Poskim note, even if swimming is intrinsically permissible, it gives rise to a host of potential Halachic problems. For example, one may not squeeze water from wet hair, wet bathing trunks or a wet towel on Shabbat. The work Yalkut Yosef (Shabbat, vol. 2, starting on p. 7) lists numerous other Halachic complexities, as well, that arise from swimming on Shabbat.

Additionally, swimming on Shabbat is wholly inconsistent with the aura of Kedusha (sanctity) and spirituality that is to characterize the Shabbat experience. Leaving aside the potential Halachic pitfalls of swimming, and assuming that one ensures to swim in a manner that could, technically, be deemed permissible, it undermines the sacred nature of Shabbat observance, and for this reason all authorities, without exception, forbade swimming on Shabbat. These Poskim include Hacham Ovadia Hadaya (in his Yaskil Abdi 4:1), Rabbi Moshe Stern of Debereczyn (in his Be’er Moshe) and Rabbi Yishak Weiss (in his Minhat Yishak). This is also the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef.

Summary: Strictly speaking, it would be permissible to swim in a pool on Shabbat under certain conditions. In practice, however, the Halachic authorities forbid swimming on Shabbat due to the potential Halachic problems that arise, and because swimming is inconsistent with the sense of sanctity and reverence with which we must treat Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Passover- Searching for Hametz in the Synagogue
Passover- Do Not Regard Meat As 'This Is For Pesach'
Passover- If A Hametz Pot Was Mistakenly Used For Pesach Cooking
Passover- The Laws regarding Glass Dishes On Passover and Throughout The Year
Passover- The Time To Start the Seder and Saying HALLEL At The End of The Seder
Passover- The Importance of MAGID In The Seder , and Leaning on the Night of Pesach
Passover- Is It Permissible To Drink Milk from A Non-Jew Owned Farm Cow Which Itself Consumed Chametz
Passover- Kashrut Questions and Answers Regarding Baby Formula, Sugar, Rice, and Food for Live Fish
Passover- Is It Permissable To Eat ROASTED Foods On Seder Nights
Passover- If A Tiny Amount of Hametz Falls Into A Pot & Cooking in Hametz Pots
May Two People Eat Meat and Milk at the Same Table?
Smelling Forbidden Foods; Heating Meat and Dairy Foods in a Microwave Oven
Drinking Non-Dairy Milk While or After Eating Meat
Serving at a Meat Meal Parve Foods That Were Served at a Dairy Meal
Is It Permissible to Use A Meat Pot To Cook A Parve Item That Will Be Mixed With A Dairy Item
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found