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Muktzeh on Yom Tov: Difference between revisions

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==Muktzeh on Yom Tov==
==Muktzeh on Yom Tov==
# All the restrictions of [[Muktzeh]] of [[Shabbat]] apply to [[Yom Tov]] and furthermore [[Yom Tov]] has some added restrictions. <Ref>S”A 495:4 </ref> According to Sephardim, more categories of Muktzeh are forbidden on Yom Tov including peels and shells that used to be edible for a person and now are edible for an animal, something that is disgusting, and something that is for sale, while according to Ashkenazim only the category of Nolad is more stringent on Yom Tov than Shabbat. <ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 495:4 writes that muktzeh on Yom Tov is more strict than Shabbat. The Rama writes that some hold that Yom Tov is just like Shabbat. Mishna Brurah 495:16 and Nitai Gavriel (Yom Tov vol. 1 24:1-2) seem to hold that Ashkenazim hold like the Rama. The Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 99:1 writes the opinion of the Rama as primary but also quotes the opinion of Shulchan Aruch. Yalkut Yosef 495:4:1 holds like Shulchan Aruch.</ref>
# All the restrictions of [[Muktzeh]] of [[Shabbat]] apply to [[Yom Tov]] and furthermore [[Yom Tov]] has some added restrictions. <Ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 495:4 </ref>  
# According to Sephardim, more categories of Muktzeh are forbidden on Yom Tov including:
## peels and shells that used to be edible for a person and now are edible for an animal (Nolad),  
## something that is disgusting (Muktzeh Machmat Miyus),  
## and something that is for sale (karchei d'zuzei).
# According to Ashkenazim only the category of Nolad applies to Yom Tov even though it doesn't apply to Shabbat. <ref>Shulchan Aruch OC 495:4 writes that muktzeh on Yom Tov is more strict than Shabbat. The Rama writes that some hold that Yom Tov is just like Shabbat. Mishna Brurah 495:16 and Nitai Gavriel (Yom Tov vol. 1 24:1-2) seem to hold that Ashkenazim hold like the Rama. The Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 99:1 writes the opinion of the Rama as primary but also quotes the opinion of Shulchan Aruch. Yalkut Yosef 495:4:1 holds like Shulchan Aruch.</ref>
# If [[Yom Tov]] falls out on [[Shabbat]], some say that it is treated stringently like a regular [[Yom Tov]]<ref>Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 21:22 </ref> while others say that it has the same restrictions as [[Shabbat]] and not the regular Yom Tov. <Ref>Sh”t Rav Poalim 1:30, Yalkut Yosef 495:4:3, Natai Gavriel ([[Yom Tov]], vol 1, 24:4) </ref>
# If [[Yom Tov]] falls out on [[Shabbat]], some say that it is treated stringently like a regular [[Yom Tov]]<ref>Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 21:22 </ref> while others say that it has the same restrictions as [[Shabbat]] and not the regular Yom Tov. <Ref>Sh”t Rav Poalim 1:30, Yalkut Yosef 495:4:3, Natai Gavriel ([[Yom Tov]], vol 1, 24:4) </ref>
==Nolad==
==Nolad==
# On [[Shabbat]] if meat is removed from a bone the bones aren’t [[Muktzeh]] if they could be given to dogs (assuming that there are dogs in the city) to chew on. <Ref>Mishna Brurah 308:110 </ref>However, on [[Yom Tov]] bones from which meat was removed on [[Yom Tov]] may not be moved as they are [[Muktzeh]]. <Ref>Mishna Brurah 495:17 </ref>  
# On [[Shabbat]] if meat is removed from a bone the bones aren’t [[Muktzeh]] if they could be given to dogs (assuming that there are dogs in the city) to chew on. <Ref>Mishna Brurah 308:110 </ref>However, on [[Yom Tov]] bones from which meat was removed on [[Yom Tov]] may not be moved as they are [[Muktzeh]]. <Ref>Mishna Brurah 495:17 </ref>