Rav Yitzchak Yosef Urges Public Not to Waste Shavuos Night: “This Night Is a Hidden Treasure”
During his weekly shiur on Motzaei Shabbos, Rav Yitzchak Yosef spoke at length about the holiness of Shavuos night and the importance of remaining awake to learn Torah throughout the night with focus and dedication. The rav urged the public to treasure every moment of the night and avoid wasting time with unnecessary interruptions or conversation.
Drawing from the words of Chazal and the introduction to the Zohar, Rav Yitzchak explained the tremendous greatness of Leil Shavuos. According to the Zohar, the early chassidim would remain awake throughout the night immersed in Torah study with joy and enthusiasm.
“Anyone who learns Torah on this night is written and recorded in the Book of Remembrance before Hashem, and Hakadosh Boruch Hu Himself blesses them with seventy blessings and crowns from the upper world,” the rav said. He added with a smile, “There is no need to travel to rebbes or mekubalim — the Ribbono Shel Olam Himself blesses the person who learns.”
The rav also cited the Pirkei D’Rabbi Eliezer, which explains that learning throughout Shavuos night serves as a rectification for Klal Yisroel having overslept on the night before Mattan Torah, requiring thunder and lightning to awaken them. Rav Yitzchak encouraged listeners — especially yeshiva bochurim — to rest properly on Erev Shavuos so they could arrive fully alert and spend the night learning seriously without bitul Torah.
The Rishon Letzion then discussed the longstanding debate among the poskim regarding the preferred form of learning on Shavuos night. On one side stand the Chok Yaakov and the Vilna Gaon, who favored intensive study of Gemara and Shulchan Aruch over reciting the traditional Tikkun Leil Shavuos. On the other side are the Chida and the mekubalim, who emphasized reading the established tikkun based on the teachings of the Arizal.
Rav Yitzchak suggested a practical compromise that he said was followed in his yeshiva and approved by his father, Rav Ovadia Yosef.
According to that arrangement, the first half of the night — from after the Yom Tov meal until midnight — should be devoted to serious Gemara and halacha learning while a person’s mind is strongest and sharpest. The second half of the night — from midnight until sunrise — should then be dedicated to reciting the traditional tikkun together with a group, which helps keep people awake and energized.
The rav also clarified that women are completely exempt from both Sefiras HaOmer and the custom of reciting the tikkun on Shavuos night, adding that there is no reason for women to force themselves to remain awake all night.
During the shiur, Rav Yitzchak also addressed a practical halachic question involving tea and coffee consumed during the overnight learning session. Referring to a ruling that appears in Chazon Ovadia, he noted that the accepted ruling had been that a person who leaves to use the restroom in the middle of drinking tea or coffee must recite a new shehakol upon returning, since the interruption was viewed as a complete break.
However, Rav Yitzchak revealed that during one of his private learning sessions with his father, he pointed out a Ramban in Maseches Pesachim that appears to indicate clearly that using the restroom does not constitute an interruption regarding eating or drinking.
“My father read the Ramban twice, looked at me, and said: ‘Correct, you are right. Tell them that you showed me the Ramban and I agree with you,’” Rav Yitzchak recalled emotionally.
As a result, he ruled that someone who leaves באמצע drinking a cup of tea or coffee and later returns to continue drinking from the same cup does not make a new bracha, since using the restroom is not considered a halachic interruption for that purpose.
The rav also expanded on the halachos of changing rooms during a bread meal and the principle of safek brachos lehakel. He explained that although the Shulchan Aruch, Rif, and Rambam maintain that moving from one room to another during a meal can require a new hamotzi, the Rema and Tosafos disagree.
Rav Yitzchak ruled that despite the general practice of following Maran, because there is uncertainty in the matter, the rule of safek brachos lehakel applies and one should not make a new bracha after changing rooms.
He further rejected the extreme interpretation that eating without a bracha in cases of uncertainty constitutes “misappropriating holy property,” explaining in the name of the Rivash that such expressions were intended only to emphasize the seriousness of the matter. In practical halacha, he said, whenever doubt exists, the Torah’s rule is to refrain from making an unnecessary bracha.
{Matzav.com}