DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 354 KB)
Allowing Children to Eat Before Kiddush

Halacha forbids eating and drinking before Kiddush on Friday night on Shabbat morning. However, the Magen Abraham (Rabbi Abraham Gombiner, Poland, 1637-1683) and Mishna Berura (Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, 1839-1933) write that this prohibition applies only to adults, and was not stated in regard to children. If a child wishes to eat or drink before Kiddush, he may be allowed to do so. They may even be given sweets and treats that are not necessary for their growth. Parents should not act stringently in this regard, and should permit their children to eat and drink as usual before Kiddush. Very often, when children come to the Shabbat table they immediately want to take something they see on the table and eat. Parents should allow the children to eat and should not make them wait until after Kiddush.

The exception to this rule is the case of a child approaching the age of Bar/Bat Misva, who should be trained in Halachic observance. For example, a boy who is already twelve and a half years old, and is thus within half a year of Misva obligation, should be trained not to eat until after Kiddush. Otherwise, parents should not stop their children from eating before Kiddush, neither on Friday night nor on Shabbat morning.

Summary: Although one may not eat or drink before Kiddush on Friday night or Shabbat morning, children who wish to eat or drink before Kiddush should be allowed to do so, unless they are within a few months or so of Bar/Bat Misva age.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Validity of a Mikveh with a Filter
Does a Gynecological Examination Make a Woman a Nidda?
Nidda – The Unique Status of a Stain Discovered During the Weeks Following Childbirth
Does a Women Recite a Beracha When She Immerses in a Mikveh After Childbirth?
The Nidda Status of a Woman After Childbirth- Both Natural & Caesarean
The Proper Procedure for Immersing in a Mikveh
Nidda – Sleeping on Each Other’s Bed, Sitting Together on a Bench or Sofa
Nidda – Guidelines for Eating Together When the Wife is a Nidda
The Proper Procedure for Reciting Sheba Berachot During the Week After a Wedding
Nidda – Handing or Throwing Objects to One’s Wife When She is a Nidda; Avoiding Affectionate Gestures When One’s Wife is a Nidda
Nidda – If a Woman Could Not Immerse Immediately After the Shib’a Nekiyim
Nidda – How Many Bedikot (Inspections) are Required During the Shib’a Nekiyim?
Nidda – Performing an Inspection After the Ona; Bathing During the Period of the Ona
Nidda – The Hefsek Tahara and Moch Dahuk Inspections
Nidda - The “Seven Clean Days”
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found