Wednesday, October 15, 2025
  
Homepage - Start here...
log in  •  join

Current Password:
New Password: (5 Char Min)
Confirm New Password:

User name (email)
Password
Remember Me:
Forgot Password?
| Home
Directory
Calendar
Alerts
Classified
Shuls & Tefillos
Contact Us
 Browse the directory by:
Business Listings
Categories
Search the directory for:
 
Important Numbers

Doctors and Physicians (14)
Emergency Numbers (12)
Hospitals (22)
Pharmacy (20)
Pharmacy - 24 Hours (4)
Pharmacy - Midnight (15)
Shatnez (1)
Toronto Jewish Social Services (1)
Walk-in Clinics (3)


FRUMToronto Topics

 Audio and PDF's:
Rabbi Ganzweig>
Weekly Publications>
 Articles:
Articles of Interest (223)
Ask The Rabbi (5431)
Bulletins & Alerts (46)
Community Events Blog (23)
Frum Toronto Staff (2)
Gut Shabbos & Gut Yom Tov (68)
Inspirational Stories (7)
Kuntrus Ramach Avarim (2)
Message Board (18)
Parenting (149)
Parsha Pearls (487)
Readers Recipes (4)
Shemiras Halashon (178)
Shmiras Haloshon Yomi (128)
Special Prayers (34)
Tehillim (99)
Thoughts for the Week (191)

FRUMToronto Links

Advertising Rates>
Eruv Toronto>


FRUMToronto Articles Ask The Rabbi

Have a question? Send it in! Questions are answered by Rabbi Bartfeld.


Blog Image: AskTheRabbi.jpg
# 2633 Forgotten But Not Forgiven
Q. On Sunday the second day of Chol Hamoed Pesach, we took out the car from the garage and sadly discovered that there was a bag of leftover chametz crackers and cookies, destined to be thrown out to the garbage on Erev Pesach, that somehow fell off and ended on a corner of the garage. We sold our chometz but we don't want that bag of chometz there now. To get rid of it can we borrow the dogs of our non-Jewish neighbor and have them eat the crackers? Can the Rov suggest another way of disposal.

A. Shulchan Aruch (O.H. 448: 66) rules that one cannot feed chometz in Pesach even to someone else or hefker (ownerless) animals. Mishna Berura (ibid. 28) explains that he derives pleasure from feeding those animals. Shaar Hatzion (28) points out that it may be a Biblical prohibition.
One may have a problem even asking a Gentile to dispose of it since it does not belong to him anymore, after all he sold his chometz before Pesach and he may now be stealing it.
Horav Shlomo Miller Shlit'a agreed that probably the best option is to cover it with boxes that will end up being higher than ten tefachim (about one meter) or to create a mechitza (separating curtain) of that minimum height, and treat it as any other chometz that one locks out correctly and sells it before Pesach.

Rabbi A. Bartfeld as advised by Horav Shlomo Miller Shlit'a.


Posted 4/14/2020 6:40 PM | Tell a Friend | Ask The Rabbi | Comments (0)

Be the First to Post a Comment!
Name:* Email:**
Comment:
* Names will be displayed. Anonymous comments will be filtered at a higher level.
** Email addresses will not be displayed or used.

Enter the characters from the image below.


Characters are not case-sensitive.





Toronto Eruv
Eruv status verified Friday afternoons. For email notification,  CLICK HERE

Toronto Weather

Home  |  About Us  |  Business Directory  |  Classified  |  Directory Rates  |  FAQ  |  Weekly Specials
Community Calendar  |  Davening Schedule  |  Weekly Shiurim  |  Zmanim  |  Contact Us
www.frumtoronto.com  - Contact Us