Can I cause a Melacha to happen in a place where Shabbat has already started? For example, if I live in New York, could I send a fax (causing the machine to print a document) to Israel on Friday afternoon, before it is Shabbat for me, but after Shabbat has started there?
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2Related: judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/11070/…– ShmuelCommented Nov 30, 2011 at 5:15
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2Is this any different from a case where I throw a stone from a time zone where it is not yet shabas into a time zone where shabas has already started?– WAFCommented May 13, 2012 at 14:50
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3@WAF The line of sunset moves at around 1,000 miles per hour, so doing that would be virtually impossible without sophisticated equipment to detect the moment of sunset to within 10 milliseconds.– ArielCommented Jan 20, 2013 at 7:41
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1@Ariel Nobody said it would be easy. . . My question was just whether a theoretical analog exists.– WAFCommented Jan 20, 2013 at 18:16
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I'd just like to note the possibility that while you didn't do a Melakha (which is pretty obviously true), Shabbat might still be Mechullal, which would be at the very least, sad.– Double AA ♦Commented Sep 28, 2016 at 16:18
4 Answers
The Shut Ohr Yizchak (Ohr Hachaim 157) says that not only it is OK, but the question not even starts ("he did nothing"). The example he gives is to call from Israel to the States on Motzei Shabat. In Israel it is after Shabat and in the States the Shabat is still on. He adds that it is even permissible to phone a non Jew and ask him to do work for you.
I read a shiur that discusses whether the commandment to rest on Shabat is for the Jew or for Creation (World?). For those who are of the opinion that the commandment is for Creation to rest, this will not be permissible. The Grm"o Fraind is brought as a posek that follows this opinion, but the majority of the poskim permit it.
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1It should be noted that although it is permitted to send it, it is questionable whether the receiver may read it. I believe it involves an issue of molad...– user688Commented Dec 1, 2011 at 7:50
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1What work are you referencing as the source here? Can you give some information about it or a link?– WAFCommented May 13, 2012 at 14:58
Rav Hershel Schacter discusses a Kasav yad of the Rambam which could assur such ideas. http://www.ou.org/torah/article/let_my_people_know inyun starts at 8:50 where he discusses this peirush HaRambam and Rav Moshe on setting up something that causes a melacha on Shabbas and he comes out that l'chumra it should not be done and the OU tries to avoid sending emails where it is shabbas somewhere else.
If you send a fax on Friday (before sunset in your timezone) to Israel, or anywhere else in the world, such that it is after the Sabbath has commenced in that time zone, then you are causing the same amount of work to be done as setting electronic timers to turn off and on the lights during the Sabbath. So like @rony says, if you find that degree of activity to be acceptable, the electromagnetic activity generated by transmission of a fax, and the electro-mechanical activity of the fax machine applying heat or ink to paper and producing the fax, then it is acceptable. It means that you are of the opinion that the Sabbath is not for all Creation to rest.
As another said, the fax will certainly not be read by an observant Jew who receives that fax during the 24 hour interval of the Sabbath. It will just sit on the fax machine untouched. Once the recipient is able to read the fax, he or she will not contact you until after the Sabbath wherever you are. So there seems little point in sending the fax until after the Sabbath in your time zone, if it is regarding a matter for which you want to transact business with the recipient.
The reverse scenario would be equally applicable. You are in some part of the world after the Sabbath has ended. You then telephone, or fax, or send an email, to someone in a timezone where it is still Sabbath. The action is not an issue, a wrong action in its own right. But there should be no expectation of any response, neither answering the phone, nor reading of the fax or email and acting on it, until the Sabbath has ended for the recipient in their time zone, however many hours it is behind your time.
Final scenario: Let us assume that the recipient needs the fax to transact business with a third party. In that case, sending the fax so that either the recipient can act on it after sunset on Saturday, or a non-Jewish employee of the recipient can act on it during the Sabbath (and transact business with other non-Jews, on the Sabbath) is acceptable.
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I recall the term Shabbos goy, but am not sure if that is a pejorative expression. The Shabbos goy is the equivalent of the non-Jewish employee who does work on the Sabbath while the Jewish person doesn't. I don't see it as pejorative, because the Jewish person would be doing work on Sunday while the Shabbos goy had his day of rest (or any day that the non-Jewish i.e. Shabbos goy person wanted as a day of rest, other than Shabbat).– Ellie KCommented Jan 3, 2012 at 7:48
Shmiras Shabbos Kehilchasa chapter 31 siff 28 quotes Rabbi S.Z. Aurbach as saying this is allowed.
He also quotes him as saying the Jew who recieves the fax may not read it.
I asked Rabbi Dovid Feinstein about this once and he said one may not send a fax from America to Israel once it is shabbos for them.
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Sounds from this answer (and a couple of others) that you had a significant shaychus with R' Dovid Feinstein ztz"l. Are there any divrei zikaron and/or lessons that you would consider sharing with us on Chat? Commented Dec 24, 2020 at 23:37
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He was seemingly one of the most uncomfortable people in his own skin who would've much rather hidden inside his gemera, away from the world. Any interaction he had with anyone, whether saying a shiur or answering a shaila, was literally him doing it out of kindness because he realized people wanted that interaction with him. I honestly felt bad talking to him sometimes, but Torah hee vililmod ani tzarich. He was kind and cordial, of course, but this aspect of his personality was just something that I picked up on and some family members of his mentioned by the shiva as well.– user6591Commented Dec 25, 2020 at 1:32