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# It is forbidden to deliver a eulogy on Chanuka, Purim, or Rosh Chodesh.<ref>Rambam Aveilut 11:3, Bet Yosef YD 401:7</ref>
# It is forbidden to deliver a eulogy on Chanuka, Purim, or Rosh Chodesh.<ref>Rambam Aveilut 11:3, Bet Yosef YD 401:7</ref>
==Where to do the Eulogy==
==Where to do the Eulogy==
# It is forbidden to do the eulogy in the shul unless the person is a talmid chacham, someone of pure reputation, or someone of good deeds.<ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 344:19 permits giving a eulogy in a shul for a talmid chacham or his wife. Chazon Ovadia (Aveilut v. 1 p. 283) permits giving a eulogy in a shul for a person of pure reputation based on the Rambam (responsa pear hadur 77)</ref>
# It is forbidden to do the eulogy in the shul unless the person is a talmid chacham, someone of pure reputation, or someone of good deeds.<ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 344:19 permits giving a eulogy in a shul for a talmid chacham or his wife. Chazon Ovadia (Aveilut v. 1 p. 283) permits giving a eulogy in a shul for a person of pure reputation based on the Rambam (responsa pear hadur 77).</ref>
# It is forbidden to bring the coffin of a person in a shul for the eulogy unless he is a great Torah giant, one of the gedolim of the generation.<ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 344:20</ref> Poskim also allow bringing in the coffin of a great sage who taught Torah or the rabbi of a town.<ref>Chazon Ovadia (v. 1 p. 275)</ref>
# It is forbidden to bring the coffin of a person in a shul for the eulogy unless he is a great Torah giant, one of the gedolim of the generation.<ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 344:20</ref> Poskim also allow bringing in the coffin of a great sage who taught Torah or the rabbi of a town.<ref>Chazon Ovadia (v. 1 p. 275) based on Chaim Byad 105 of Rav Chaim Palagi and Meiri in Chibur Hateshuva</ref>
 
==Tziduk Hadin==
==Tziduk Hadin==
# The Sephardic custom is to do tziduk hadin even on Yom Tov sheni. However, the Ashkenazic custom is that it isn't said on any day on which there is no tachanun.<ref>Shulchan Aruch and Rama YD 401:6</ref>
# The Sephardic custom is to do tziduk hadin even on Yom Tov sheni. However, the Ashkenazic custom is that it isn't said on any day on which there is no tachanun.<ref>Shulchan Aruch and Rama YD 401:6</ref>