[Avodah] Chometz: Less than a kezayis
Zev Sero via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Sun Feb 19 22:17:12 PST 2017
On 19/02/17 20:31, Akiva Miller via Avodah wrote:
> They write in the name of Rav Chaim Pinchos Scheinberg ztz"l:
>
>> The general obligation to check for and get rid of crumbs
>> does not apply if the crumbs are less than the size of an
>> olive (k'zayis) and are dirty or spoiled enough to deter a
>> person from eating them.
> If this is indeed the halacha, then it explains and simplifies several
> difficulties I've had over the years. But *is* this the halacha? The
> page has very few references to printed sources, and I'd appreciate any
> mar'eh m'komos that anyone might offer.
Yes, this is the halacha as I've always understood it.
> Beyond the lack of references, I have a specific question on this. They
> seem to be saying that one may deliberately ignore chometz gamur, and
> deliberately *not* get rid of it, provided it is smaller than a kezayis
> *and* he is not worried that someone might eat it.
>
> Meiheicha teisa? Have we ever been taught such a thing? We are allowed
> to keep a small amount of chometz over Pesach?
Crumbs smaller than a kezayis are automatically batel, except "a nice
rolls", which one would want to keep if one knew about it (e.g. a
wrapped candy).
There are two reasons why, midrabanan, bitul doesn't help: Lest one find
a "nice roll", and lest one find chametz and absentmindedly eat it.
These are obviously related; a dirty crumb that one would never think of
eating is by definition not a "nice roll" that one would exclude from
ones bitul.
--
Zev Sero May 2017, with its *nine* days of Chanukah,
zev at sero.name be a brilliant year for us all
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