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Esrog Planting

Original publication date:

Akiva from Beitar asks:

I managed to keep my sh'mittah esrog fresh till now. Would it be permitted for me to plant the esrog pips? What would be the status of the fruit growing from these pips?

Any produce which has kedushas shvi'is may not be sown even after the end of the sh'mittah year. The Torah tells us that such produce should be eaten - and not planted (Chazon Ish 9:4). Do pips and pits of sh'mittah produce have kedushas shvi'is? The Kesef Mishneh (on the Rambam 7:15/16) is of the opinion that pips have the same status as the fruit. The Chochmas Odom (Chapter 17 of Sha'arei Tsedek) holds that they have no kedushah. The Chazon Ish rules that only those pits which are actually used as animal fodder (10:11) or which would have t'rumah status if they were part of t'rumah fruit (13:11) have kedushah. Since esrog pips fall into neither of these categories, it would be permitted to sow them. Rav Elyashiv has also ruled that one may sow these esrog pips. Since the pips have no kedushah, neither will their fruit (unless it grows in the sh'mittah year). However, one should be aware that it is forbidden to slice open an esrog solely for the purpose of extracting the pips. Since cutting open an esrog in this way shortens its life, one is thereby causing the destruction of sh'mittah produce.

  Contact Rabbi Yoel Moore via Emaill

MDShmita is written by Rabbi Yoel Moore
Layout & Design: Lev Seltzer
Rabbi Yona Vogel, Rosh Yeshiva, Machon Daniel

 

 

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  Last modified: October 17, 2009