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    DAVENING IN A TANK

    I. Where to Daven
    Soldiers, like all
    professionals, use
    their extensive
    training and
    experience to inform
    their behavior in the
    field but ultimately they must improvise
    based on real-life circumstances.
    Tanks offer limited room for personal
    movement. They do not have sleeping
    quarters. However, during war a soldier
    may not have the option to leave the
    tank and sleep on the ground. He may
    have to stay in the tank for days at a
    time.
    Tanks not only lack sleeping quarters
    but also toilet facilities. When you must
    remain inside your tank, you need to
    improvise. From what I understand,
    standard practice is to use old water
    bottles and a metal box to hold the
    waste until they can empty and clean
    them. While this solves the logistical
    problem for soldiers, it creates a
    halachic problem.

    You are not allowed to daven in the
    presence of tzo’ah (excrement). The
    Gemara (Berachos 25a) says that
    you must distance yourself at least
    four amos from tzo’ah before reciting
    Shema. Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim
    79:1) says that you must be four amos
    not only from the tzo’ah but also from
    the reach of its smell, and you must not
    be able to see it. How do you daven
    inside a tank when you are not allowed
    to daven near tzo’ah?
    During or after Operation Cast Lead,
    known as the 2008-2009 Gaza War,
    Rav Yosef Tzvi Rimon was asked by a
    soldier this question. The soldier said
    that he had not let the tank for a week
    and a half. How was he supposed to
    daven?(Halachah Mi-Mkorah, Tzava,
    vol. 1, pp. 327-331) Rav Rimon notes
    that on a trip to the US, he had been
    asked whether soldiers during battle are
    exempt from the obligation to daven.
    He replied that he had never been asked
    by a soldier about not davening. He
    is only asked about how a soldier can
    daven because soldiers want to do so.

    II. Hospital Curtain
    As mentioned above, you
    have to distance yourself four
    amos from the tzo’ah before
    davening, even when it is
    hidden from view. There is
    not enough room inside a tank
    for that. However, there are
    other options. The Gemara
    (ibid., 25b) says that if the
    tzo’ah is in another domain,
    you can daven without any
    significant distance as long as you do not
    smell the tzo’ah. Rav Shlomo Zalman
    Auerbach was asked about a patient
    in a hospital in which near his bed is
    a container with tzo’ah in it (Halichos
    Shlomo, Tefillah 20:6). He replied that
    the patient can close his curtains and
    daven if he does not smell the tzo’ah.
    He points out (ibid., n. 10) that while
    Mishnah Berurah (Bi’ur Halachah 87:3
    s.v. mutar) requires a full mechitzah,
    i.e. an actual divider from wall to wall,
    here the curtain suffices because it hides
    the tzo’ah from view. Since the verse
    says “and cover your refuse” (Deut.
    23:14), a curtain that covers sight of the
    offending material is sufficient. This
    assumes that the patient does not smell
    the tzo’ah.
    The same question applies when a
    hospital roommate has a bed pan.
    Rav Moshe Stern argues at length
    that a curtain constitutes a sufficient
    separation for these purposes even if
    it is not a halachic wall (Be’er Moshe,
    vol. 1, no. 3). Rav Eliezer Waldenburg
    quotes Rav Yosef Shalom Elyashiv as
    disagreeing but argues in favor of Rav
    Auerbach’s view (Tzitz Eliezer, vol.
    12, no. 11). Rav Waldenburg adds that
    if the curtain serves as a wall, then any
    smell is coming from another domain
    and does not prevent davening.
    However, if the curtain serves only as
    a covering and not as a wall, then you
    need to do something to disperse the
    smell. Rav Waldenburg follows the
    view that spices or incense that mask
    the smell suffice. Others require a fan
    or air filter to remove the smell.
    III. Boxed In
    Unlike a hospital, a tank does not
    allow room for a curtain. However,
    there is another reason to permit
    davening in close proximity to the
    tzo’ah. The Gemara (Berachos 25b)

    says that you may recite Shema facing
    tzo’ah that is in a glass container. Even
    though you can see the tzo’ah through
    the glass, it is covered and covering
    is the key element. Based on this,
    Rambam (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos
    Keri’as Shema 3:9) rules that any
    utensil that covers the tzo’ah suffices
    as long as you do not smell the tzo’ah.
    Mishnah Berurah (87:10) and Bi’ur
    Halachah (87:3 s.v. ve-chen) discuss
    different kinds of utensils which do not
    work. However, if the utensil fully seals
    in the tzo’ah, it definitely serves as a
    covering for this purpose.
    Based on the above, Rav Rimon writes
    that the box used as a toilet in the tank
    suffices to cover the tzo’ah. Since the
    box is completely closed, the tzo’ah is
    covered. If there is any smell then the
    soldiers should turn on the air filter
    to remove the smell. In that way, the
    soldier may daven inside the tank
    without concern for the tzo’ah.
    While this is sufficient, Rav Rimon
    offers an additional thought regarding
    the smell. When is the smell of tzo’ah
    so bad that it prohibits davening and
    Torah learning? Some places smell
    nice and others have various odors. Is a
    farmer never allowed to daven because
    there is a smell of manure throughout
    the area? Are you never allowed to
    daven on a kibbutz? Rav Rimon notes
    that Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim

    86:1) forbids reciting Shema near foul-
    smelling water. Mishnha Berurah (ad

    loc., no. 1) says that the smell must
    be one that it is the way to (i.e. most
    people) find it offensive. Rav Rimon
    suggests that if that is the smell that
    residents normally smell and are used
    to, then it is permitted for everyone to
    daven there. Perhaps that also applies to
    the smell inside a tank to which soldiers
    are accustomed. However, whenever
    possible, they should put on the air filter
    during davening.