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Interruptions between the Bracha and Eating: Difference between revisions

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# One shouldn't wink or signal to someone between the bracha and eating but if one did after the fact one shouldn't recite another bracha.<ref>Maamar Mordechai 25:8 cites the Halachot Ketanot 1:57 who held that winking is an interruption but he argues.</ref>
# One shouldn't wink or signal to someone between the bracha and eating but if one did after the fact one shouldn't recite another bracha.<ref>Maamar Mordechai 25:8 cites the Halachot Ketanot 1:57 who held that winking is an interruption but he argues.</ref>
# Some say that an action isn't a hefsek while others hold it is.<Ref>Yabia Omer 5:4:4 cites the Minchat Elazar 1:25 who explained that the Smag and Sefer Hatrumah cited by Bet Yosef 34 who allow using one bracha of tefillin for a pair of Rashi Tefillin and Rabbenu Tam tefillin hold that an action isn't a hefsek. Rashi Eruvin 50a s.v. vhari implies that an action is a hefsek. Yalkut Yosef 51:23 writes that we're strict to consider it a hefsek.</ref>
# Some say that an action isn't a hefsek while others hold it is.<Ref>Yabia Omer 5:4:4 cites the Minchat Elazar 1:25 who explained that the Smag and Sefer Hatrumah cited by Bet Yosef 34 who allow using one bracha of tefillin for a pair of Rashi Tefillin and Rabbenu Tam tefillin hold that an action isn't a hefsek. Rashi Eruvin 50a s.v. vhari implies that an action is a hefsek. Yalkut Yosef 51:23 writes that we're strict to consider it a hefsek.</ref>
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==If the One Making the Beracha or the Listeners Talk==
==If the One Making the Beracha or the Listeners Talk==
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