| bio | website | sbehr.blogspot.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Bet Shemesh, Israel | |
| age | 40 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 10 months |
| seen | Apr 24 at 20:14 | |
| stats | profile views | 70 |
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Feb 15 |
revised |
If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? added 1 characters in body |
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Feb 15 |
comment |
If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? +1 for explaining nicely what the common practice is in Israel, though I won't give answer credit, since technically the question I was asking was about how one could eat chometz on that shabbos, not on what alternatives you have. |
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Feb 15 |
accepted | If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? |
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Feb 15 |
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If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? I like this answer most. Short, sweet and to the point. As to @jake's question about muktze, see my comment there. IMO if the non-Jew bought a kosher challah before Pesach and froze it, then the moment Pesach departs, the challah is no longer muktze, so if he invites you to join him for a meal, you can accept, and you don't have to make a kinyan on food that your host offers you, so there's no issue there, either. |
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Feb 15 |
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If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? @jake - Muktzeh ends the moment the yom tov ends. The fact that we treat bein hashmashos lechumra in both directions is only because we're not expert enough to judge the exact moment when Yom Tov ends and Shabbos begins, but it would seem to me that at that very moment, whenever it is, the muktzeh-ness of the chometz disappears, and it turns out that when shabbos came in the chometz was not muktzeh. So if a non-Jew bought some kosher challos before Pesach and froze them, then invited you over on shabbos to eat with him, I can't see what would be wrong with that? |
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Feb 15 |
revised |
If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? "eat", not "have" |
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Feb 15 |
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If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? @msh210 - I meant "eat"; will edit question. |
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Feb 15 |
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If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? @DoubleAA - ah, I missed the subtlety there (wheat vs flour). Nevertheless, the intention of the question was whether or not you could eat chometz on that shabbos. Not sure if soggy wheat kernels qualify as food, and I don't think I'd particularly want to eat such a mix, even just for the novelty of being able to say "I ate chometz on the shabbos directly after Pesach!" I had a nice, fluffy Vizhnitzer challah in mind... :) |
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Feb 14 |
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If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? @DoubleAA - adding water to flour is a melacha |
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Feb 14 |
asked | If the last day of Passover is Friday, may I eat chametz on the Shabbat right after? |
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Feb 13 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Jan 18 |
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Mehadrin vs. Non Mehadrin @avi - Interesting, I didn't know that. Link to source? |
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Dec 21 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Nov 29 |
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Why is techeles not universally accepted? +1 Personally I think that almost throw-away line "... [with] the high price of Tcheiles the Rabbonim don't want to obligate the general population to purchase it," is probably the best reason I've heard so far. |
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Nov 26 |
accepted | What is “emunas chachomim”? |
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Nov 25 |
asked | What is “emunas chachomim”? |
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Nov 16 |
comment |
Why are angelic icons not prominent in Judaism? @JimThio - yes, but that was a Divine injunction, not something that any human chose to do for artistic purposes. |
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Oct 24 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Sep 20 |
asked | What is the meaning of psak? |
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Aug 26 |
awarded | Nice Answer |