{"id":8535,"date":"2016-02-24T04:00:45","date_gmt":"2016-02-24T02:00:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/?p=8535"},"modified":"2018-05-27T09:15:01","modified_gmt":"2018-05-27T06:15:01","slug":"03-24-04","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ph.yhb.org.il\/en\/03-24-04\/","title":{"rendered":"04. The Status of a Woman who Married a Man from a Different Community"},"content":{"rendered":"
The status of a woman who married a man from a different ethnic community is similar to that of one who migrates to a place where local custom differs from what he is accustomed to: if he intends to live there forever, he must cease practicing his earlier customs and accept the local custom (based on SA YD 214:2; O\u0124 468:4; MB 14). Likewise, a woman who marries a member of a different ethnic community is considered to be moving into his home permanently, and she must adopt his customs. For instance, if the custom of her husband\u2019s community is to eat kitniyot<\/em> on Pesa\u0125, she eats them too, and if it is not to eat them, she may not. If they wait six hours between meat and milk, she waits six, and if they wait an hour, she waits an hour. As R. Shimon b. Tzema\u0125 Duran (Tashbetz<\/em> 3:179) writes, it is inconceivable that they regularly eat at the same table, and what is permitted to one is forbidden to the other. Therefore, a woman must follow her husband\u2019s customs, for one\u2019s wife is like himself.<\/p>\n A widow who had a child from her husband continues to follow her late husband\u2019s customs. However, if they did not have children, she returns to her ancestral customs. 1<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n Similarly, a woman must recite prayers and berakhot<\/em> according to her husband\u2019s nusa\u0125<\/em>, so that there will not be two different sets of customs in the same household. However, if it does not upset her husband, and it is difficult for her to change her nusa\u0125<\/em>, she may continue praying silently in her own nusa\u0125<\/em>, but she may not pray or recite a berakha <\/em>aloud in a nusa\u0125<\/em> other than that of her husband. When her children reach the age of education, she must teach them to pray in her husband\u2019s nusa\u0125<\/em>. Therefore, even if her husband agrees that she may praying and recite berakhot<\/em> in the nusa\u0125<\/em> to which she is accustomed, when her children reach the age of education she should preferably switch to her husband\u2019s nusa\u0125<\/em> so that it is easier for her to teach her children how to recite prayers and berakhot<\/em>. 2<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n Igrot Moshe further states that a married woman does need not perform hatarat nedarim (annulment of vows) in order to take on her husband\u2019s customs. This is implicit in MB 468:14 as well, which states that since halakha mandates that one who moves from one location to another must adopt the practices of the new community, he does not require hatarat nedarim. So states Kaf Ha-\u0125ayim 468:43. Though some say that she requires hatarat nedarim (see Peninei Halakha: Pesa\u0125, chapter 9 n. 1), in practice, we do not require it, because when she first started practicing her parents\u2019 customs, it was clear that if she marries someone from a different ethnic community she would adopt his customs. Hence, it was clear that she did not intend to follow her parents\u2019 customs all her life, as brought by Halikhot Shlomo: Prayer, ch. 1 n. 8. ↩<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n A ba\u2019al teshuva who marries a religious woman who comes from a religious family may adopt her customs over his ancestral customs, since from the standpoint of religious practice he is joining her family. It is best to ask a rabbi about this matter. ↩<\/a><\/span><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" The status of a woman who married a man from a different ethnic community is similar to that of one who migrates to a place where local custom differs from what he is accustomed to: if he intends to live there forever, he must cease practicing his earlier customs and accept the local custom (based […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[128],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-8535","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-03-24"],"yoast_head":"\n\n