DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 David Ben Baba Z"L

Dedicated By
Mikael, Marcel & Maurice Kavian

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 358 KB)
Asking a Gentile to Write on One’s Behalf on Shabbat

One of the thirty-nine categories of forbidden activity on Shabbat is writing. Rabbi Yishak of Vienna (late 12th-early 13th century), in his work Or Zarua, claimed that the Torah prohibition of writing on Shabbat applies only to writing "Ketab Ashurit," the Hebrew letters as they are formed in a Torah scroll. In his view, writing in other languages, or in Hebrew but in standard form, as opposed to the form used in the Torah scroll, is forbidden on Shabbat only by force of Rabbinic enactment. A number of other authorities held this view, as well.

This ruling is of great importance with regard to the question of asking a non-Jew to write on one’s behalf on Shabbat. A famous Halachic principle permits asking a gentile to perform forbidden activity on one’s behalf on Shabbat in situations of "Shebut De’shbut Be’makom Hefsed." This means that the forbidden act in question is prohibited only by force of Rabbinic enactment, as opposed to Torah law, and that the individual will incur a financial loss if that act is not performed. In light of the Or Zarua’s position, Hacham Ovadia Yosef ruled, in his work Yabia Omer, that one may ask a gentile to write something on Shabbat if this is necessary to prevent a financial loss. Hacham Ovadia maintained that we may rely on the Or Zarua’s classification of standard writing as a Rabbinic prohibition to permit asking a gentile to write something to avoid incurring a loss. One possible example of such a case is where a person must urgently receive a certain delivery and has to fill in a form. If he will incur a financial loss by not filling in the form, he may ask a gentile to fill in the form on his behalf on Shabbat.

Summary: Although generally one may not ask a gentile to write or perform other forbidden activity on Shabbat, one may ask a gentile to write something if this is necessary to avoid a financial loss.


See Menuhat Ahava, Helek 3, Perek 22, Halacha 8.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Prohibitions of Misleading or Insulting Another Person
Is it Permissible to Study Secular Philosophy?
When is it Appropriate or Inappropriate to Report Bad Tidings?
Is It Permissible To Wear A Wool Tzitzit Under A Linen Shirt or Is It A Violation of Shatnez
Announcing a Fast Day in the Synagogue on the Preceding Shabbat
Barech Alienu for Travelers to and From Israel
Traveling on Ereb Shabbat
Maintaining Peace in One’s Financial Dealings
Birkat Ha'gomel: The Meaning of the Words, and Whether a Child Recites the Beracha
Reciting Tefilat Ha’derech
Hanukah – If One Does Not Have Enough Oil For All the Candles
Hanukah – Lighting a Menorah That Has a “Back”
Is Birkat Ha’gomel Required After Taking a Cruise on the Kinneret?
Synagogue Decorum and The Prohibition Against Speaking During Torah Reading – In the Wake of the Har Nof Tragedy
The Status of Pasteurized Wine
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found