DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 758 KB)
Inflating a Ball on Shabbat

The Gemara in Masechet Shabbat (48) addresses the question of whether it is permissible to fill a pillow with feathers or other material on Shabbat. If the pillow had not been previously filled, the Gemara establishes, then filling it on Shabbat would constitute "Makke Ba'patish" – completing the process of making a functional item, one of the thirty-nine categories of Shabbat prohibitions. It appears from the Gemara that this would be forbidden on the level of Torah law ("Mi'de'orayta"). However, if the pillow was previously stuffed and the material had come out of the pillow, then returning the material inside the pillow would be permissible. (Of course, this assumes that one does not stitch the pillow, which would certainly be forbidden on Shabbat.) This Halacha is codified by the Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 340:8).

Rabbi Gedalya Felder (Toronto, 20th century), in his work Yesode Yeshurun, extends the Gemara's ruling to the contemporary issue of inflating balls on Shabbat. He rules that if the ball was already inflated before Shabbat, and subsequently became deflated, Halacha allows inflating it anew on Shabbat. If, however, the ball had not been inflated before Shabbat, then inflating it on Shabbat would be forbidden due to the prohibition of "Makke Be'patish," as discussed above.

Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Israel, 1910-1995), by contrast, as cited in the work "Shemirat Shabbat Ke'hilchata" (16:8), disagrees. In his view, one cannot compare the two cases of filling a pillow with feathers and filling a ball with air, and thus he maintains that Halacha allows inflating a ball even if it had not been previously inflated.

It should be noted that according to Sephardic practice, balls are in any event considered Mukse and may not be handled on Shabbat. For Sepharadim, then, this Halacha applies only in the case of a child, regarding whom Halacha is more lenient and allows handling and paying with a ball on Shabbat. Children are thus permitted to inflate a ball with which they wish to play on Shabbat, but adults should not inflate a ball or even handle it at all Shabbat.

Summary: It is permissible to inflate a ball on Shabbat. However, Sephardic custom forbids handling a ball in any event on Shabbat, except for children.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If One Counted the Wrong Day of the Omer, or Had the Wrong Day in Mind While Reciting the Beracha
Praying for the Bet Hamikdash After Counting the Omer
Reciting “Lamenase’ah Binginot” After Birkat Kohanim During the Omer Period
Buying New Clothes or Other Items During the Omer
Omer- In The Event A Person Knows He Will Be Unable To Count The Omer
When are Haircuts Allowed During the Omer?
Sefirat Ha’omer – Guidelines For One Who Travels to a Different Time Zone
Omer, The Sefira Period – Reciting She'he'hiyanu, Purchasing New Garments, Moving into a New Home, Renovating, and Hosting an Engagement Party
Sefirat Ha'omer – Reciting the Beracha Only After Determining Which Number to Count
Omer- May One Count the Omer with a Beracha After Correcting Somebody's Erroneous Counting?
If a Person Remembered to Count the Omer Only During Ben Ha'shemashot
Sefirat HaOmer- Can One Fulfill the Obligation of Sefirat Ha’omer by Listening to the Hazan’s Counting?
Sefirat Ha'omer – May a Person Count the Omer for Friday if He Had Already Recited Arbit?
Sefirat HaOmer- May One Count the Omer with a Beracha After Asking, "Is Today Such-and-Such Day"?
The Chazan's Counting of the Omer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found