Games on Shabbat: Difference between revisions

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==Muktzah==
==Muktzah==
#  
# According to Sephardim, some say games (not balls) aren't muktzeh. <ref>Sh”t Or Letzion 2:26:8 writes that a ball is Muktzah for boys and girls above Bar and Bat mitzvah, however games, in general, isn’t muktzah but it’s better not to treat it as muktzah and not move it. </ref>
 
==Bitul Torah==
# <ref> Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5 permits games only for girls under Bat Mitzvah because for adults it’s an issue of muktzah, and for boys under Bar Mitzvah it’s an issue of getting them involved in something that will cause Bitul Torah. </ref>


==Building blocks==
==Building blocks==
# Arranging blocks one next to another without attaching them is permissible. <ref> Shemirat Shabbat KeHilchata 23:16. </ref>
# Arranging blocks one next to another without attaching them is permissible. <ref> Shemirat Shabbat KeHilchata 23:16. </ref>
# Building Lego or Duplo isn't considered Boneh and is permissible. <ref> Yabea Omer 7:39(4), Yalkut Yosef 314:1 </ref>
# Building Lego or Duplo isn't considered Boneh and is permissible. <ref> Yabea Omer 7:39(4), Yalkut Yosef 314:1, Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5 </ref>


==Board Games==
# It is permitted to play monopoly on Shabbat. <Ref> Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5 in the note permits </ref>


==Puzzle==
==Puzzle==
# Putting together a jigsaw puzzle, according to Asheknazim is forbidden, and according to Sephardim, it is permissible for children under the age of Bar Mitzvah. <ref> Shemirat Shabbat Kehilchata 23:16 writes that arranging blocks can be permissible under two conditions: there is no interlocking frame nor do the pieces themselves interlock. Accordingly, a jigsaw puzzle is forbidden. However, Rav Moshe HaLevi in Menuchat Ahava (vol 3, 22:16) permits as long as the letters aren't connected with glue or stitching. </ref>
# Some poskim permit building puzzles on Shabbat, while others forbid. To avoid the issue of Borer (separating) one must be careful not to separate pieces that one doesn’t want from those that one wants. <Ref> Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:6 writes that it’s not considered writing since it’s only for the purposes of a game (and it’s temporary). So too there’s no issue of Borer since one takes the pieces one wants and uses them immediately. So holds Sh”t Beer Moshe 6:26, and Rav Scheinberg quoted in Children in Halacha (pg 140), and Rav Moshe HaLevi in Menuchat Ahava (vol 3, 22:16). However, Shemirat Shabbat KeHilchata 16:23 forbids if the pieces fit tight together (interlock). Similarly, Shalmei Yehuda (pg 90) quoting Rav Elyashiv and Sefer Tiltulei Shabbat (pg 25; Rabbi Yisrael Bodner) write that it’s forbidden. </ref>
 
 


==References==
==References==
<References/>
<References/>

Revision as of 20:01, 3 October 2010

Muktzah

  1. According to Sephardim, some say games (not balls) aren't muktzeh. [1]

Bitul Torah

  1. [2]

Building blocks

  1. Arranging blocks one next to another without attaching them is permissible. [3]
  2. Building Lego or Duplo isn't considered Boneh and is permissible. [4]

Board Games

  1. It is permitted to play monopoly on Shabbat. [5]

Puzzle

  1. Some poskim permit building puzzles on Shabbat, while others forbid. To avoid the issue of Borer (separating) one must be careful not to separate pieces that one doesn’t want from those that one wants. [6]


References

  1. Sh”t Or Letzion 2:26:8 writes that a ball is Muktzah for boys and girls above Bar and Bat mitzvah, however games, in general, isn’t muktzah but it’s better not to treat it as muktzah and not move it.
  2. Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5 permits games only for girls under Bat Mitzvah because for adults it’s an issue of muktzah, and for boys under Bar Mitzvah it’s an issue of getting them involved in something that will cause Bitul Torah.
  3. Shemirat Shabbat KeHilchata 23:16.
  4. Yabea Omer 7:39(4), Yalkut Yosef 314:1, Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5
  5. Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:5 in the note permits
  6. Sh”t Or Letzion 2:45:6 writes that it’s not considered writing since it’s only for the purposes of a game (and it’s temporary). So too there’s no issue of Borer since one takes the pieces one wants and uses them immediately. So holds Sh”t Beer Moshe 6:26, and Rav Scheinberg quoted in Children in Halacha (pg 140), and Rav Moshe HaLevi in Menuchat Ahava (vol 3, 22:16). However, Shemirat Shabbat KeHilchata 16:23 forbids if the pieces fit tight together (interlock). Similarly, Shalmei Yehuda (pg 90) quoting Rav Elyashiv and Sefer Tiltulei Shabbat (pg 25; Rabbi Yisrael Bodner) write that it’s forbidden.