Halacha for Tuesday 25 Av 5785 August 19 2025

The Kotel-The Western Wall

Question: Does the Kotel (Western Wall) have any special sanctity?

Answer: Our Sages (Midrash Shemot Rabba, Parasha 2) taught: “Hashem’s divine presence has never moved from the western wall of the Holy Temple.” Our Sages added, “The verse states, ‘Behold, he stands behind our wall’-this refers to the western wall of the Bet Hamikdash which Hashem swore would never be destroyed.” The Midrash Eicha explains that our enemies wished to destroy the Western Wall, however, it was decreed in heaven that it shall never be destroyed, for the divine presence of Hashem rests in the west. Maran Rabbeinu Ovadia Yosef zt”l explains that this refers to the Western Wall of our days and he proceeds to support this based on the words of all of the commentaries who write that the Western Wall refers to the wall of the Temple Mount and this is the wall from which the presence of Hashem never budges, for this wall is directly opposite the Holy of Holies within the Bet Hamikdash which, in turn, is directly under the Heavenly Bet Hamikdash. (Chazon Ovadia-Arba Ta’aniyot, page 441)

Pirkei De’Rabbi Eliezer (Chapter 35) states that when one prays at the Western Wall, it is as if one has prayed before Hashem’s Throne of Glory, for in this place, there is an opening for all of the prayers of the Jewish nation to be accepted, as the verse states, “This must be the house of G-d and this is the gate of Heaven.”

It is therefore customary among the entire Jewish nation to pray from the depths of one’s heart to Hashem next to the Kotel, the last remnant of the bet Hamikdash and founded by King David. It is for this reason that the Kotel was not destroyed, based on the teaching of Rabbeinu Moshe Chagiz (in his Sefer Eleh Mas’ei) who writes that “this wall has never been destroyed because build on the foundations that King David laid and which no enemy ever had control. Indeed, we can clearly see that these stones still stand whole in their place as if they had just emerged from the hands of a Heavenly craftsman who placed them there almost in a miraculous manner, for it is unnatural [for it to remain standing so long] based on their height and thickness. It is almost impossible for something like this to be built by man without Heavenly assistance.”

Indeed, the great Ari z”l supported the custom of praying next to the Kotel. Although in those times there were individuals who knew exactly the parts of the Temple Mount where it was permissible to pray in purity, nevertheless, they did not follow their hearts to pray there, for there is no greater prayer in Jerusalem in our times than at the Western Wall where the divine presence of Hashem rests.

We should point out that in the past several years, three additional rows of the Kotel’s stones have been discovered deep in the ground. The newer looking top eighteen rows of stones were built by Sir Moses Montefiore zt”l to protect the preexisting, sacred Kotel stones from being damaged and ransacked by enemies. (Chazon Ovadia, ibid, page 443)

Summary: One who wishes to pray in the sacred parts of Jerusalem may do so at the Western Wall, for the divine presence of Hashem does not move from there. This was indeed the custom of the greatest luminaries of the Jewish nation already from the times of the saintly Ari z”l who would pray only there and not anywhere else on the Temple Mount.

8 Halachot Most Popular

Eating, Bathing, and Brushing Teeth on Yom Kippur

Some Laws of Yom Kippur All are obligated to fast on Yom Kippur, including pregnant and nursing women. Any woman whose health is at risk due to the fast should consult a prominent Torah scholar who is well-versed in these laws, and he should render his ruling whether or not she must fast. One whose......

Read Halacha

The Seventh Day of Pesach

Based on a Derasha Delivered by Maran Rabbeinu Ovadia Yosef zt”l When the Jewish nation left Egypt and the Red Sea split for them, the Torah states: “The messenger of Hashem, who had been going ahead of the Israelite army, now moved, and followed behind them; and the pillar of cloud s......

Read Halacha

The Laws of Hearing Parashat Zachor- A Special Sermon

“Remember What Amalek Has Done to You” On the Shabbat preceding Purim, which is this coming Shabbat, after the opening of the Ark immediately following Shacharit prayers, two Sifrei Torah are removed; in the first one, we read the weekly Parasha (which is Parashat Tetzaveh this year, 57......

Read Halacha

Rain in the Sukkah

There are certain places, such as New York, where it commonly rains during the holiday of Sukkot. Even in Israel it has happened in the past that rain has fallen during Sukkot. In the Land of Israel, rain during the Sukkot holiday is an ominous sign, as our Sages taught that this is comparable to......

Read Halacha


The Obligation to Eat in the Sukkah

A Meal of an Established Character Throughout the entire Sukkot holiday, both during the night and day, it is prohibited to eat a meal of an established character outside of the Sukkah. The amount of food one is required to eat in order for one’s meal to constitute a “meal of an establi......

Read Halacha

Simchat Torah

The Rambam (end of Chapter 8 of Hilchot Lulav) states: “Even though it is a Mitzvah to rejoice on all the festivals, there was an additional celebration in the Temple on the festival of Sukkot, as the Torah commands: ‘And you shall rejoice before Hashem, your G-d, for seven days.’ ......

Read Halacha

The Laws of Mentioning “Mashiv Ha’Ruach”

We Begin Reciting “Mashiv Ha’Ruach” “Mashiv Ha’Ruach U’Morid Ha’Geshem” is a praise we recite to Hashem during the winter months within the “Mechayeh Ha’Metim” blessing of the Amidah as is printed in all Siddurim. We begin recitin......

Read Halacha

The Most Awesome Day of the Year

An Excerpt from a Discourse Delivered by Maran zt”l in the Chazon Ovadia Synagogue in Rechavia, Jerusalem on the Night of Yom Kippur It is quoted in the name of a great sage who made a play on words using the words of the Mishnah, “Did you tithe? Did you make an Eruv? Light the candle......

Read Halacha