The Quickest Seder: A Guide for Medical Professionals and Patients


Pesach 5779

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If a doctor or other medical staff is on duty in a hospital on Seder night, it is important to know how to conduct an abridged Seder in order to fulfill the special Mitzvos of the night properly. A person who begins the Seder in the customary manner may find himself unable to complete it and will possibly miss some of the more important Mitzvos. It is therefore ideal to calculate or attempt to predict how much time he has available before beginning the Seder and prioritize the most important parts.

The following rules are also applicable to a sick person who is unable to conduct an entire Seder. He too should be aware of the rubric of the Seder so that he can fulfill its most basic obligations.

There are a plethora of Halachos that are applicable to patients and specific disease states on the Leil Haseder, but this essay will focus purely on the doctor or patient who is faced with time constraints that require an abridged Seder.

First we will outline the basic structure of the Seder and its Mitzvos:

 

The following are the Mitzvos that a person is obligated to perform during Leil Haseder:

Sippur Yetzias Mitzrayim – aside from the recurring daily Mitzvah to mention Yetzias Mitzrayim throughout the year, there is an additional, Torah obligation, to speak about Yetzias Mitzrayim on the Leil Haseder.

Mitzvos Involving Eating – Eating Matzah, Maror, Korech and Afikomen. Matzah is the only Torah obligation.

Click hereDrinking Arba Kosos – a Rabbinic obligation. Each Kos needs to contain at least a Reviyis of wine or grape juice.

The Mitzvah of Reclining (Heseiba) – The Arba Kosos, Matzah, Korech and Afikomen are all eaten of whilst reclining on one’s left side. This is a Rabbinic obligation.

The following principles should be taken into consideration when deciding how to conduct an abridged Seder:

  1. If a person is sick and is unable to fulfill one or any of the Mitzvos of the Seder, then he is exempt. He should bear in mind that he may still fulfill the Mitzvah of Simchas Yom Tov, by being joyful and trusting that Hashem will cure him.
  2. In a similar vein, if a doctor is occupied with the holy duties of medical care on Leil Haseder, he should remember that Pikuach Nefesh (danger to life) overrides all of the Mitzvos of the Torah. Moreover, the Halacha is that “Ha’osek Bemitzvah Patur Min Hamitzvah” – somebody occupied with performing one Mitzvah (such as healing the sick) is exempt from performing another Mitzvah at that time. If Hashem has willed it that he spend Leil Haseder saving lives, he should do so with joy. If he fails to do so and attempts to conduct a Seder instead, it may even be a “Mitzvah haBa’ah be’Aveirah” – a Mitzvah that is performed by way of a sin (Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt”l)
  3. In cases where one is very short on time, it is important to remember that it is vital that one conduct the Seder in its correct order. For example – one should not drink all of the Arba Kosos one after the other, then eat the Matzah and then recite the Haggadah. The Shulchan Aruch (C. 472:8) rules that one who drinks all four Kosos one after the other is considered to have only drunk one large Kos and has not fulfilled his obligation.
  4. The greatest challenge for a person who is pressed for time on Leil Haseder is the recital of the Haggadah. It is important that to realize that there are sections of the Haggadah that comprise the core elements of the Mitzvah of Sippur Yetzias Mitzrayim and must be recited in order to fulfill the Torah obligation. Moreover, there are certain paragraphs that need be said so as to ensure that the Kos that is drunk immediately afterward is considered to have been drunk “Al Haseder” – at its correct time.
  5. Furthermore, Chazal instructed that the Mitzvah of Sippur Yetzias Mitzrayim be done in a very specific way: One must do it in a manner of “Sha’alah U’teshuva” (question and answer). One must begin with the shame (“Maschil Bigenus”) and end with the glory (“Mesayem Bishevach”). One must mention “Pesach, Matzah and Maror”. The sections of the Haggadah were selected and arranged in order to meet these criteria.

Based on the above, the following are the minimum requirements for a Pesach Seder:

  1. Firstly, one makes Kiddush on a cup of wine and drinks it (the first Kos). One may then skip Urchatz and Karpas. As for reciting the Haggadah, the most important paragraph to say is Avadim Hayinu as it contains the core elements of the Torah obligation of Sippur Yetzias Mitzrayim. One should then skip to the Brachah of Asher Ge’alanu and drink the second Kos.
  2. If one has more time, it is important to say the paragraph of “Rabban Gamliel Omer” which contains the mention of Pesach, Matzah and Maror, and then continue from there until the end of Maggid.[1]
  3. If there is more time, one should include the sections of Ma Nishtanah (so as to recite the Haggadah in a manner of “Sha’alah U’teshuva”) and Mitchilah Ovdey Avodah Zarah Hayu Avoseynu until the paragraph beginning “Rabi Yehuda Hayah Nosein Bahem Simanim” (so as to be Maschil Bigenus U’mesayem Bishevach).
  4. In the case of one who is too ill to recite the Haggadah himself, it is important that he at least hear the Haggadah recited by others, if possible.
  5. Following Maggid, one should take three (Bedieved, at least two) Matzos and make a Brachah and eat a Kezayis. (The minimum Shiur of Kezayis in a pressing situation – Besha’as haDechak – is a piece of Matzah weighing twenty grams.)
  6. The Mitzvah of eating a Kezayis of Matzah takes precedence over eating Maror or Korech. Eating a Kezayis of Maror takes precedence over eating
  7. If a person did not have the time or was incapable of eating Karpas and did not make the Brachah of ha’Adamah, he should nevertheless not recite the Brachah of Borei Peri ha’Adamah on the Maror.
  8. After eating the Seudah, one should eat another Kezayis of Matzah for Afikomen followed by Birkas Hamazon and the Brachah of haGafen on the third Kos. If there is no time for Hallel and the fourth Kos, a Brachah Acharonah (al haGefen) should be recited.
  9. If time permits, one should recite Hallel and drink the fourth Kos. If one skipped the first half of Hallel (in Maggid), it should be said now if possible.
  10. Having completed Hallel, if one sees that one has a few more minutes to spare, one should say Nishmas (and the Brachah that follows it) before drinking the fourth Kos. If one had already made a Brachah Acharonah on the third Kos, one should recite the Brachah of haGafen on this Kos.
  11. In a situation when a person either doesn’t have the time or isn’t capable of eating more than one Kezayis of Matzah, he should conduct the Seder in the regular way, skip Motzi Matzah, eat the Seudah, do Netilas Yadayim[2], recite the Brachos of Hamotzi and Al Achilas Matzah and then eat the That way he will fulfill the Mitzvos of Matzah and Afikomen together (Mishnah Berurah 482:6).
  12. If a person is forbidden to eat Matzah and will therefore not be Bentching, if he is able to eat some of the Yom Tov foods, then doing so is considered enough of a Hefsek (division) between the second and third Kosos. If he is unable to eat anything, he should at least make a form of a Hefsek by saying a Dvar Torah or speaking about Yetzias Mitzrayim and then drink the third Kos.
  13. If a person was unable to perform any of the Mitzvos before Chatzos, he should conduct the entire Seder[3] with all of the Brachos (except for Asher Ge’alanu, Al Achilas Matzah, or Al Achilas Maror). He should also drink all four Kosos at their proper times, but should only recite the Brachah of haGafen on the first and third Kosos[4].

 

[1] Though some hold that if one fails to mention “Pesach, Matzah and Maror” one has not fulfilled one’s obligation, Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt”l (Halichos Shlomo, Erchei Refua, Part 1, p131) contended that is only to “fulfill the Mitzvah Min haMuvchar” but one does fulfill the basic Mitzvah even if it is omitted.

[2] One should not recite the Brachah of Netilas Yadayim as one is not intending to eat a Kebeitzah (see Shulchan Aruch, 158:2 and Mishnah Berurah 9 ad. loc.)

[3] If time allows; otherwise, he should follow the guidelines above to prioritize the Mitzvos haLaila in the available time

[4] Since there is a doubt if one can fulfill the Mitzvah of Arba Kosos after Chatzos, he should follow the opinion of the Mechaber (O.C. 472) that one recites haGafen only on the first and third Kosos.


Rabbi Yossi Sprung

Rabbi Yossi Sprung

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