3

Before Pesach, it is common to attempt to get rid of whatever chametzdik food one is able to. Taking this and the issur (prohibition) of bal tashchit into account, is it actually permissible to throw out and/or burn chametz that is still edible, rather than selling it?

CYLOR

Noach MiFrankfurt
  • 12,969
  • 4
  • 25
  • 71
  • If one holds that one should not sell chametz gamur then they should make a chesbon to try to finish all their chmatez beforehand, – sam Apr 03 '15 at 01:33
  • Chametz on Pesach is value-less. You aren't destroying anything of value. – Double AA Apr 03 '15 at 03:10
  • @DoubleAA Technically, when you destroy it, it has value. But I agree with your comment anyway. Case in point: Rav... Shteinman I think?... someone, anyway, was asked about a baal t'shuva's stealing his parent's chametz before Pesach (in a manner that would effect a change in ownership) so as to prevent his parent from owning it on Pesach, and then selling it to a non-Jew, and replied that, as the chametz would become worthless if not stolen, the theft was effectively meshiv aveda (returning a lost object, i.e., here, saving an object from being lost). – msh210 Apr 03 '15 at 08:37
  • 1
    related answer http://judaism.stackexchange.com/a/16323/1362 – rosends Apr 03 '15 at 11:50

2 Answers2

3

I have always had this question as well, and I recently found an answer:)

In Yabia Omer Chelek Even Haezer 4:9 אות ד Rav Ovadia discusses how the custom of breaking the cup at the wedding is not bal tashchit since there is a purpose for it and bal tashchit doesnt apply to that minhag, since whenever we have a reason for the action, bal tashchit doesn't apply. The same thing he writes in Yechaveh Daat 5:46 where he discusses if cutting branches of a tree that produces fruit for the schach is bal tashchit. He answers that it is not bal tashchit because again it has a reason, and it is a mitzvah, and therefore bal tashchit doesn't apply in those situations.

I would say the same thing here: Since the Torah tells us to get rid of the chametz and therefore we have a reason, bal tashchit doesn't apply in this case.

Avishai Tebeka
  • 1,599
  • 3
  • 20
  • https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/57081/bal-tashchit-and-chametz#comment153181_57084 – wfb Apr 03 '23 at 14:26
  • Same thing (even for a minhag) with overflowing a cup of wine – רבות מחשבות Apr 04 '23 at 12:07
  • This doesn't excuse having lots of chametz sitting around that needs to be destroyed. The issur was when you got pizza take-out when you still had 10 boxes of pasta in the cabinet. You're right that once you get to erev pesach you have to destroy the pasta, but it was wrong to put yourself in that situation. – Double AA Apr 04 '23 at 16:51
0

עשה דוחה לא תעשה - The biblical commandment to destroy all the leaven in one's possession overrides the general prohibition of bal tashchit. According to Rabbi Yehuda - which I believe is how Rashi rules - the mitzva of biur chametz is by burning. In fact, the general custom is to burn the last remains of chametz.

Loewian
  • 17,746
  • 2
  • 29
  • 60
  • 3
    I would imagine that this would not fall under bal tashchit in the first place, since bal tashchit is likely defined as destruction for no purpose, whereas here the destruction is for the purpose of fulfilling a mitzvah; thus there would be no necessity to invoke עשה דוחה לא תעשה – wfb Apr 14 '15 at 21:17
  • fair enough.... – Loewian Apr 15 '15 at 01:35