Cups Fit for Netilat Yadayim: Difference between revisions

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# If a kli is round or wobbly and can't sit without being supported or leaned against something so that it can't hold a reyivit without any support it is unfit for netilat yadayim.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:3</ref>
# If a kli is round or wobbly and can't sit without being supported or leaned against something so that it can't hold a reyivit without any support it is unfit for netilat yadayim.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:3</ref>
# It is unfit to wash one's hands with water that was contained in someone else's hands. According to Ashkenazim after the fact it is acceptable.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:6 and Rama</ref>
# It is unfit to wash one's hands with water that was contained in someone else's hands. According to Ashkenazim after the fact it is acceptable.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:6 and Rama</ref>
# It is unfit to wash netilat yadayim from a faucet since that isn't considered poured with the force of a human being.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:7</ref>
 
# A paper or plastic cup is fit for netilat yadayim if nothing else is available. It is preferable to have in mind that one is going to use it again and not throw it out immediately.<reF>Halacha Brurah 159:3. See Igrot Moshe OC 3:39.</ref>
# The water must be poured onto one's hands with a cup so that it is poured by the strength of a person.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:8</ref> In an extenuating circumstance when it is impossible to get water poured on one's hands one can dip one's hands in a cup which has a reviyit of water. Nonetheless, one may not recite a bracha on such a washing and one should hold the bread with a napkin.<ref>Mishna Brurah 159:57</ref> If afterwards one was able to wash normally they should without a bracha.<ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 159:8</ref>  
 
# A paper or plastic cup is fit for netilat yadayim if nothing else is available. It is preferable to have in mind that one is going to use it again and not throw it out immediately.<reF>Halacha Brurah 159:3. Igrot Moshe OC 3:39 regarding to kiddush writes that one shouldn't use a disposable cup since a kos shel bracha needs to be complete and a disposable cup is lesser significant than a broken one.</ref>
# A bottle with a thin opening can be used for netilat yadayim as long as the water is poured out constantly without interruption.<ref>Or Letzion 2:46:6</ref>
# A bottle with a thin opening can be used for netilat yadayim as long as the water is poured out constantly without interruption.<ref>Or Letzion 2:46:6</ref>
==Sources==
==Sources==
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Revision as of 23:25, 8 August 2017

  1. A cup of any material is fit for netilat yadayim as long as it can hold a reviyit of water.[1]
  2. If it has a hole in it or cracked such that it would let in water if the cup was placed on top of water then it is unfit for netilat yadayim even if the cup can still hold a reviyit below the hole or crack.[2]
  3. However, if the cup was made specifically so that there was a hole but with a support or something else it could hold a reviyit it is fit for netilat yadayim. For example, it is acceptable to wash from a canteen with a spigot that when opened water flows out of the hole and when closed can hold a reviyit of water.[3]
  4. If a kli is round or wobbly and can't sit without being supported or leaned against something so that it can't hold a reyivit without any support it is unfit for netilat yadayim.[4]
  5. It is unfit to wash one's hands with water that was contained in someone else's hands. According to Ashkenazim after the fact it is acceptable.[5]
  1. The water must be poured onto one's hands with a cup so that it is poured by the strength of a person.[6] In an extenuating circumstance when it is impossible to get water poured on one's hands one can dip one's hands in a cup which has a reviyit of water. Nonetheless, one may not recite a bracha on such a washing and one should hold the bread with a napkin.[7] If afterwards one was able to wash normally they should without a bracha.[8]
  1. A paper or plastic cup is fit for netilat yadayim if nothing else is available. It is preferable to have in mind that one is going to use it again and not throw it out immediately.[9]
  2. A bottle with a thin opening can be used for netilat yadayim as long as the water is poured out constantly without interruption.[10]

Sources

  1. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:1
  2. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:1
  3. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:5 and Rama. Mishna Brurah 159:27 points out that if the spigot doesn't close completely and the canteen leaks it is unfit for netilat yadayim.
  4. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:3
  5. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:6 and Rama
  6. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:8
  7. Mishna Brurah 159:57
  8. Shulchan Aruch OC 159:8
  9. Halacha Brurah 159:3. Igrot Moshe OC 3:39 regarding to kiddush writes that one shouldn't use a disposable cup since a kos shel bracha needs to be complete and a disposable cup is lesser significant than a broken one.
  10. Or Letzion 2:46:6