{"id":8289,"date":"2016-02-11T00:09:56","date_gmt":"2016-02-10T22:09:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=8289"},"modified":"2018-05-24T12:48:30","modified_gmt":"2018-05-24T09:48:30","slug":"03-11-09","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/03-11-09\/","title":{"rendered":"09. The Law Concerning a Baby"},"content":{"rendered":"
Feces of young infants do not smell that bad and therefore it does not have the status of excrement. When a child reaches the age that he can eat a <\/span>kezayit<\/span><\/i> of cereal grain within a <\/span>shi\u2019ur akhilat pras <\/span><\/i>(the time it takes to eat half a loaf of bread; c. 6-7 minutes), one must distance herself from the excrement as she would from an adult\u2019s excrement (SA 81:1); some write that this starts at one year of age. Speaking sacred words near a baby\u2019s feces is only permitted in extenuating circumstances. <\/span>Le-khat\u0125ila<\/span><\/i> it is better to distance oneself from the excrement of even a week-old baby when speaking sacred words (MB 81:3; <\/span>Kaf Ha-\u0125ayim <\/span><\/i>1:6). <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n When praying near a baby at least one year old who is still in diapers, one should first make sure that no foul odor is present. If there is a foul odor and it reaches the person praying, she must stop her prayers. However, as long as the child does not smell, she may pray near him, for even if he did defecate, since the feces are covered in a diaper and clothing and there is no scent, it is not forbidden to speak sacred words near him. 1<\/a><\/sup> <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n When a woman is in the middle of the <\/span>Amida<\/span><\/i> and her child comes to her with a dirty, smelly diaper, she may not continue praying. If someone else can take care of the child, she must signal with her hands that they should distance the child from her, and then she can continue her prayers. However, when no one else is present to care for the child at that moment, she should, if possible, place him in a crib or in a different room where he can play until she completes her prayer. If no such option is available \u2013 for example, if the child is crying and requires her attention \u2013 since she is prohibited from continuing to pray while he is next to her anyway, she must stop praying, clean the child, change his diaper, and wash her hands. She should try to return to her prayer as quickly as possible, because if the interruption is shorter than the time it takes for her to recite the whole <\/span>Amida<\/span><\/i>, she may continue praying from the place where she stopped. If in her estimation, however, the interruption lasts longer that the time it would take her to recite the entire <\/span>Amida<\/span><\/i>, from start to finish, she must begin the <\/span>Amida<\/span><\/i> from the beginning (SA 104:5).<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n If a soiled child approaches a woman while she is reciting a short <\/span>berakha<\/span><\/i>, she should distance herself from him to a place where the odor cannot be smelled and then finish the <\/span>berakha<\/span><\/i>. If she is reciting <\/span>Birkat Ha-mazon<\/span><\/i>, which takes more time to say, and she cannot distance herself from him long enough to complete all four <\/span>berakhot <\/span><\/i>of <\/span>Birkat Ha-mazon<\/span><\/i> because he is crying and she needs to pick him up to calm him down, since she cannot continue her <\/span>berakha <\/span><\/i>while she smells his excrement anyway, she should clean him, change his diaper, wash her hands, and continue from the beginning of the <\/span>berakha<\/span><\/i> at which she stopped (SA<\/span> <\/i>65:1; BHL 183:6, s.v. \u201cAfilu\u201d). <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n R. Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Halikhot Shlomo: Prayer 20:4-5) also rules that one may pray near a baby who does not smell and there is no need to check him. However he adds a novel insight: If the person praying knows that the baby defecated in his diaper, the diaper has the status of a graf shel re\u2019i (a vessel that holds feces, such as a chamber pot), which in turn has the status of actual feces even if it does not smell. Thus, one must move four amot away from a baby with a dirty diaper unless there is another piece of clothing on top of the diaper and there is no foul odor. If the baby urinated in his diaper, even if he is not wearing clothes, one may pray near him as long as there is no foul smell. Some disagree and maintain that since diapers are either disposable or cloth, and is thrown out or laundered after each use, they are not considered a graf shel re\u2019i (R. Nisim Karelitz, cited in Ve-zot Ha-berakha p. 150. R. Auerbach further states that one may bring a baby to synagogue when he is diapered and dressed, and there is no need to be concerned that he might defecate. ↩<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Feces of young infants do not smell that bad and therefore it does not have the status of excrement. When a child reaches the age that he can eat a kezayit of cereal grain within a shi\u2019ur akhilat pras (the time it takes to eat half a loaf of bread; c. 6-7 minutes), one must […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[115],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-8289","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-03-11"],"yoast_head":"\n\n