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    SITTING IN THE SUKKAH ON SHEMINI ATZERES

    The subject of
    whether one should
    sit in the sukkah on
    Shemini Atzeres has
    been the topic of
    debate and discussion
    since time immemorial.
    There are many who
    have the custom not to
    sit in the sukkah (mainly
    chassidim), while there
    are many others who do. Others have the
    customto eat there at night and not by day, or
    to only make Kiddush in the sukkah by day
    and then go inside.
    There are those who sit in the sukkah on
    Shemini Atzeres, but their in-laws do not.
    What should they do? When people go to
    Eretz Yisrael for Sukkos where there is only
    one day of Yom Tov, should they sit in the
    sukkah on Shemini Atzeres? We will discuss
    some of the halachos and opinions related to
    this sensitive but important and practical area
    of halachah.
    Introduction
    The Gemara in Sukkah vacillates between
    different opinions on the halachos of sitting in
    the sukkah and reciting a brachah of Leisheiv
    Basukkah on Shemini Atzeres, when there is
    a safeik over whether it is included in the Yom
    Tov of Sukkos. One interpretation is that all
    opinions agree that no brachah is made, but
    the argument is over whether one should sit in
    the sukkah. Another interpretation is that all
    agree that one should not sit in the sukkah, but
    the argument is over whether the brachah is
    made. The Gemara concludes that one should
    sit in the sukkah without reciting the brachah,
    because it would seem odd to do so; if it is
    Shemini Atzeres then it is not Sukkos, and
    if it is Sukkos it is not Shemini Atzeres. In
    addition, if one recited the brachah it would
    look like he was adding to the Yom Tov of
    Sukkos, which is not allowed because of bal
    tosif (adding to a mitzvah).
    According to all opinions, one does not take
    arba minim on Shemini Atzeres. They are

    considered muktzeh, since there is a safeik
    whether Shemini Atzeres is part of Sukkos.
    There are those who say that since only the
    first day of Yom Tov is d’Oraisa and the other
    days are d’Rabbanan, on Shemini Atzeres
    we are lenient with it and do not take them.
    However, sitting in a sukkah can be beneficial
    for a person even if he is not doing it for a
    mitzvah (e.g. it is comfortable to sit there),
    and therefore can be considered oneg Yom
    Tov.
    The opinion that one should sit in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres is quoted by many
    poskim (in Chutz L’Aretz). Those who eat in
    the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres should train
    their children to do the same.
    In Eretz Yisrael, where there is only one day
    of Yom Tov for both Shemini Atzeres and
    Simchas Torah, no one eats in the sukkah.
    As mentioned above, since the Gemara and
    many poskim maintain that sitting in the
    sukkah is required on Shemini Atzeres (in
    Chutz L’Aretz), then why do so many not eat
    in the sukkah?
    Different Customs
    The Tur quotes a custom of some to eat in the
    sukkah on Shemini Atzeres but not to sleep
    there. However, he says the custom is not
    to do this, and those who sit in the sukkah
    should sit there by night and by day. There
    are those who make Kiddush, eat a bit in the
    sukkah and eat the rest of the meal in the
    house. Others do not eat in the sukkah at all
    on Shemini Atzeres (see below).
    Although the following poskim disagree, they
    quote the custom of some who did not sit in
    the sukkah: Shiltei Giborim, Elyah Rabbah,
    Darchei Moshe, Beis Yosef, Taz, Magen
    Avraham, Yosef Ometz, Be’er Heitiv, Noda
    B’Yehudah, Chachmas Shlomo, and others.
    Those Who Did Not Eat in the Sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres
    Although there are many poskim who say one
    should eat in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres,
    there are Rishonim who say it is not required
    and was not done.
    Rashi says that in his times there were
    many gedolim (such as Rabbeinu Eliezer
    and Rabbeinu Shmuel) who did not eat in
    the sukkah on Shemini
    Atzeres at night. In the thirteenth to
    fourteenth century, it is written that some
    did not sit in the sukkah. The reason for
    the leniency was based on the Yerushalmi
    (see below). Rabbeinu Chananel says the
    custom is to sit the entire day in the sukkah.
    The fact that he said “entire” indicates
    that there were those who did not sit the
    entire day in the sukkah in his days. The
    Maharam Igra ate in his house at night and
    in the sukkah during the day. The Maharil
    went to visit Harav Meir M’Igra who ate in
    his house, and he did not object to it. The

    Lombardi family (in Italy)
    did not eat in the sukkah. The
    custom of the Baal Shem Tov
    was not to eat in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres. He
    practiced the custom of Eretz
    Yisrael because he lived with
    the kedushah of Eretz Yisrael.
    The Yosef Ometz says the
    Taryash family (about the
    sixteenth century) ate outside
    the sukkah, and they have
    upon whom to rely.
    Some explain that there are
    those who ate inside at night
    because it was cold at night and the sukkah
    was not pleasant (see below). They ate in
    the house because if they ate in the sukkah it
    would appear as if they were doing it for the
    mitzvah and not for oneg.
    One can see from the above sources that the
    custom of many to refrain from eating in the
    sukkah on Shemini Atzeres did not begin with
    chassidim; rather, it started much earlier.
    Those Who Ate in the Sukkah
    Rashi ate in the sukkah during the day and
    night of Shemini Atzeres. Rashi’s rebbi
    Rabbeinu Yitzchak also sat in the sukkah.
    The Maharil ate in the sukkah during both
    night and day. The Gra ate in the sukkah on
    Shemini Atzeres. The Chasam Sofer zt”l ate
    in the sukkah. Harav Yosef Ber Soloveitchik
    zt”l opined strongly that one must sit in the
    sukkah.
    The Yerushalmi
    As mentioned above, some gedolim did not
    eat in the sukkah based on the Yerushalmi
    that says: Sukkah on the seventh day, how?
    …you need to make your sukkah pasul from
    midday and make Kiddush in your home.
    Rav Chanina says one whose sukkah is
    pleasant should make Kiddush on the night
    (see below) of the last days of Sukkos in his
    house and eat in the sukkah. If he wants to
    eat in the sukkah he still has to make Kiddush
    in his house, because when he says “Shemini
    Atzeres” in Kiddush, if he is still in the sukkah
    it is a contradiction. It is apparent from the
    Yerushalmi that if the sukkah is not pleasant
    (e.g. if it is cold or windy) then one does not
    have to sit in it on Shemini Atzeres.
    Some explain that the Yerushalmi is referring
    to Eretz Yisrael, where there is only one day
    of Yom Tov, and even if one enjoys being in
    the sukkah he makes Kiddush in the house.
    However, others say the Yerushalmi said
    nights, which indicates that even in Chutz
    L’Aretz, where there are two days of Yom
    Tov, one should make Kiddush in his house.
    A Chiddush
    There is a chiddush on the reason why people
    do not eat in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres: As mentioned above,

    there are two interpretations of the halachah
    regarding sitting in the sukkah on Shemini
    Atzeres, and the Gemara says the final
    halachah. However, Rav Yehudah ben
    Kalonimus says that the line in the Gemara
    that “the halachah is to sit but not [recite] a
    brachah” is not part of the original Gemara
    and was added in later. Generally, if there are
    two interpretations of a Gemara we follow the
    second. In this case, the second interpretation
    is that all agree not to sit in the sukkah but the
    argument is over whether a brachah is recited.
    Accordingly, he says we should not sit in
    the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres. He further
    questions, how we can sit in the sukkah after
    we ask for rain? Additionally, how can we say
    in Kiddush that it is Shemini Atzeres and then
    sit in the sukkah?
    According to this, why does anyone sit in
    the sukkah? He says that since Chazal said
    there have to be two days of Yom Tov in
    Chutz L’Aretz, if we do not sit in the sukkah
    on any of those days then they are definitely
    not Sukkos, and there is a concern of making
    Yom Tov disgraceful.
    Other Reasons for the Lenient Custom
    One should not think that those who do not
    eat in the sukkah onShemini Atzeres are
    doing something against halachah, as there
    are reasons for their practice. Many great
    people have eaten outside the sukkah on
    Shemini Atzeres.
    The Aruch Hashulchan offers the following
    reason why many are lenient with sitting and
    eating in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres:
    If one would sit in the sukkah on Shemini
    Atzeres in a way that appears to be for the
    mitzvah of sitting in the sukkah, it would not
    be allowed. However, sitting in the sukkah if
    it is not for the mitzvah is permitted. In places
    where it is pleasant outside, one must sit in
    the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres just as he did
    the entire Yom Tov. (Since it is hot, it can be
    argued that it is not recognizable one is doing
    it for the mitzvah and therefore it is not a
    problem to do so on Shemini Atzeres as well).
    However, in cold countries, if we were to
    exempt ourselves from sitting in the sukkah
    because of the weather, an entire Yom Tov
    could pass without sitting in the sukkah.

    Therefore, we have to
    sit in the sukkah and
    sleep there even if it
    is cold. On Shemini
    Atzeres, according
    to the strict halachah,
    one must sit in the
    sukkah in a way that
    it does not appear that
    he is doing it for the
    mitzvah of sitting in the
    sukkah. This is not possible if it is very cold,
    since in that case one would only sit in the
    sukkah for a mitzvah. Therefore, there needs
    to be a heker so that it does not look like it
    is being done for the mitzvah. If one sleeps
    in the sukkah all Sukkos, he should not sleep
    there on Shemini Atzeres. One who does
    not sleep in the sukkah on Sukkos needs a
    different heker. Either he should not eat there
    at night, or he should eat there during the day
    only a bit and rest inside afterward. A heker
    would be to eat in the sukkah by day and
    leave right away, to show he is not doing it
    for a mitzvah.
    The Yerushalmi appears to say that one
    should not sit in the sukkah on the eighth
    day of Sukkos. However, some say that the
    Yerushalmi is not arguing with the Gemara
    in Sukkah above, but it is talking about Eretz
    Yisrael and not Chutz L’Aretz, where there is
    an additional day because of a safeik.
    At night, some do not eat in the sukkah because
    one says Shehecheyanu on Shemini Atzeres
    at night, and if you are eating in the sukkah
    it is a contradiction to the Shehecheyanu that
    it is a new Yom Tov. They are of the opinion
    that the Gemara that said to sit in the sukkah
    was referring to during the day, when no
    Shehecheyanu is recited. Some do not sit in
    the sukkah by day either, since we ask for rain
    on Shemini Atzeres, and if we still sit in the
    sukkah then we will not want rain yet and the
    tefillah will not be sincere (see below).
    Others say a reason to be lenient and not sit
    in the sukkah is because on Shemini Atzeres
    night one comes home late from shul and
    is very tired, and it is a bother to take the
    food etc. to the sukkah. If one does it, he is
    clearly only doing it because of the mitzvah
    of sukkah and not because it is pleasant, and it
    may be a concern of bal tosif.[ Therefore, the
    custom of many is not to sit in the sukkah on
    Shemini Atzeres night.
    The Sfas Emes explains that when the
    Gemara says one should sit in the sukkah but
    no brachah is made, it was not saying one is
    obligated to sit in the sukkah, but rather that
    one is allowed to do so.
    Some mention if it is cold outside one should
    not sit in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres, but
    in areas of Chutz L’Aretz that are warm, one
    may not use this heter (see below). Others
    also point out that the Gemara that says one
    should sit in the sukkah was only referring to

    warm climates.[ The Likutei Maharich says
    that because of this reasoning many people
    do not sit in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres,
    especially at night when it is cold and the
    sukkah is not pleasant to sit in. If one has the
    sukkah in his house (i.e. his roof opens) he
    has no heter not to eat there, even on Shemini
    Atzeres.
    Harav Yosef Ber Soloveitchik zt”l says the
    custom not to eat in the sukkah is incorrect
    and originated when the chassidishe rebbes
    would invite all their chassidim over to eat
    and hear divrei Torah, but the sukkah was
    not big enough. Since it would pain them not
    to hear their rebbe, they all ate outside the
    sukkah. Eventually, they forgot the reason
    why they did so (namely, that there was no
    room) and they accepted not to eat in the
    sukkah as a custom of chassidim. This reason
    is quoted by the Maharshag, the Moadim
    V’zmanim and others.
    Sitting vs. Sleeping
    Those who hold one should sit in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres may eat there but should
    not sleep there, because when one eats in the
    sukkah he is making a heker that it is not
    Yom Tov since he is not making a brachah,
    but there is no heker when one sleeps there.
    However, others say that one may sleep in
    the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres as well. The
    custom follows the latter opinion and one
    may sleep in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres.
    The Gra was so stringent with sleeping in the
    sukkah on Shemini Atzeres that even though
    if it is cold on other nights of Sukkos one does
    not have to sleep in the sukkah, on Shemini
    Atzeres he told his students to wear coats etc.
    and still sleep in the sukkah even if it was
    cold. The Chasam Sofer slept in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres.
    Eating in the Sukkah on Shemini Atzeres
    Those who eat in the sukkah on Shemini
    Atzeres should not linger there, but should eat
    and leave quickly. There are those who say
    that on Shemini Atzeres, one should not eat
    foods in the sukkah that would not require a
    Leisheiv Basukkah on Sukkos, but the custom
    is that one may eat those foods in the sukkah
    on Shemini Atzeres. In addition, those who
    eat in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres should
    not eat there until it is dark (i.e. they should
    not daven Ma’ariv early and eat before
    nightfall), or else it may still be Sukkos
    and they would have to recite a brachah of
    Leisheiv Basukkah.
    Sukkah for Daytime Kiddush
    Many have the custom not to eat in the
    sukkah at night on Shemini Atzeres, but to
    make Kiddush in the sukkah by day, eat some
    Mezonos, and then go inside for the meal.
    Some explain that the whole meal is not eaten
    there because we daven for rain on Shemini
    Atzeres and one wants his tefillah to be
    answered (and he will not eat in the sukkah if

    it’s raining). Another reason
    is to show that we are not
    doing it for the mitzvah, since
    we are eating the main meal
    inside. In addition, if one
    would eat the whole meal in
    the sukkah in a cold climate,
    it would seem he was doing it
    for the mitzvah. This was the
    custom of the Munkatchers,
    as well as that of Rav Tzvi
    Elimelech of Dinov and
    others.
    Hot Climates
    As mentioned above, according to some
    poskim, if it is cold outside one does not
    have to eat in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres.
    Therefore, one may think the halachah may
    be different in a hot place. However, this is
    not so. Even if one is in a place where it is
    warm outside, one who has the custom not
    to sit in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres can
    follow his custom, especially in places where
    it is hot and uncomfortable to sit outside. The
    customs date back hundreds of years, and
    one may follow his custom irrelevant of the
    specific climate where he is residing at that
    time.
    Lights Out
    If one forgot to set the lights in the sukkah to
    go on, Harav Yaakov Kamenetsky zt”l says
    that he should sit in the house, because if he
    sits in the dark it is recognizable that he is
    doing it for a mitzvah. Others say one should
    ask a non-Jew to turn on the lights.
    Sukkos in Eretz Yisrael
    It is very common for people from Chutz
    L’Aretz to go to Eretz Yisrael for Sukkos, and
    they are required to keep two days of Yom Tov.
    Are they allowed to sit in the sukkah there on
    Shemini Atzeres, even though nobody there
    sits in the sukkah on that day?
    The poskim discuss this question. Some
    say if one is going to a hotel or house that
    he owns/rents where there will be a sukkah
    available, then he should eat in the sukkah if
    that is what he does in America. If he does not
    eat in the sukkah at home then he should not
    do so in Eretz Yisrael. Some argue that one
    should not sit in the sukkah. Others say if the
    sukkah is in a public place one should not sit
    there, because it may be a disgrace to those
    in Eretz Yisrael who do not sit in the sukkah.
    Still others maintain that one should eat in the
    house or hotel at night, and during the day he
    should eat in the sukkah.
    However, if one goes to visit someone who
    lives in Eretz Yisrael, he should eat with him
    in the house. The reason for this is that it
    is a bother to ask hosts to set up tables etc.
    in the sukkah if they do not eat there. Also,
    many people do not eat in the sukkah at all on
    Shemini Atzeres in Chutz L’Aretz, so there are
    reliable opinions to do so. In addition, there

    are poskim who say if one will end up sitting
    alone in the sukkah then this is considered
    painful, and one who is in pain does not have
    to eat in the sukkah.
    Sometimes parents take their (married)
    children to Eretz Yisrael for Sukkos and the
    sons-in-law may have the custom to sit in the
    sukkah; they should continue to do so even if
    the in-laws do not and they should go inside
    for zemiros.
    Eretz Yisrael Jew in Chutz L’Aretz
    If one who lives in Eretz Yisrael comes to
    Chutz L’Aretz and is staying with someone
    who sits in the sukkah, he should sit in the
    sukkah as well. He should sleep in the house
    to show that it is definitely not Sukkos for him,
    but this should be done privately. However, if
    the person is alone in the house, he should eat
    in the house.
    One Who Does Not Have a Custom
    If one does not have a specific custom, he
    should sit in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres.
    [92] Some poskim say that even if his father
    has the custom not to sit in the sukkah, one
    should sit in the sukkah even against his
    father’s will. However, this should not be
    done without discussing it with one’s rav
    beforehand. In any case, if one’s parent is
    makpid, it is not in the spirit of Yom Tov for
    the son to sit in the sukkah and the parent to
    sit inside the house.
    In-Laws
    A complicated question can arise when one

    has the custom to eat in the sukkah and his in-
    laws do not. Some will not go to their in-laws

    on Shemini Atzeres to avoid this. It seems
    that if one does go he should not eat in the
    sukkah, since it will cause friction and pain,
    and one who is in pain does not have to sit in
    the sukkah. Some mention in either case one
    should continue his custom of sitting in the
    sukkah and come in for zemiros or dessert.
    Conclusion
    Although the Gemara says that one should sit
    in the sukkah on Shemini Atzeres we have a
    number of reasons to be lenient. The custom
    not to sit there actually dates back many
    centuries and was not made up by chassidim,
    and there are many sources for this practice: