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<font size=3>At 08:08 PM 3/25/2018, Akiva Miller wrote on
Areivim:<br><br>
I am moving this to Avodah.<br><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">R' Yitzchok Levine
wrote:<br><br>
> Today as I walked home from a kiddush with a neighbor he told<br>
> me that his brother-in-law, who did not eat Gebrokts in the<br>
> past, has decided that from now on he will eat Gebrokts. His<br>
> brother-in-law is not on my email list, so the Committee to<br>
> Encourage People to Eat Gebrokts cannot take credit for this<br>
> switch. Nonetheless, this is something that the Committee
applauds.<br><br>
I would applaud it too, *IF* that person asked a shailah about
whether<br>
he is allowed to change that practice.<br><br>
If he simply decided, on his own, to abandon his previous practice,<br>
then I would NOT applaud it.<br><br>
(Please note my use of the word "practice". I am not paskening
on<br>
whether or not this counts as a minhag. That's the posek's job.)<br><br>
Akiva Miller (who has never avoided gebroks)<br>
</blockquote><br><br>
Why doesn't the hataras Nedarim we make before Rosh Hashana work for
this?<br><br>
YL</font></body>
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