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Sefer Chafetz Chayim                                                                                                                                                                                                              1 VOL-3
                              Hilchot Esurei Lashon Hara
                                      Kelal Zayin                                            365   e1        daily Halacha: 25 tevet, 25 eyar, 25 elul;   leap year-  5 shevat, 14 eyar, 24 elul

                                                                                             375   e2/3.   daily Halacha:                 leap year- 6 shevat, 15 eyar, 25 elul
             Be'er Mayim Chayim on page 119                                                  377   e3/4.   daily Halacha: 26 tevet, 26 eyar, 26 elul;   leap year-  7 shevat, 16 eyar, 26 elul
             K7/5.   Everything we have discussed until now relates to an average            383   e3/6.   daily Halacha: 27 tevet, 27 eyar, 27 elul;   leap year-  8 shevat, 17 eyar, 27 elul
             person, but if this person is in any event a known Rasha because                389   e3/8.   daily Halacha: 28 tevet, 28 eyar, 28 elul;   leap year-  9 shevat, 18 eyar, 28 elul
             it was common knowledge that he was contemptuous of mitzvot
             and routinely violated laws (10) that were well known throughout                397   e3/10.  daily Halacha: 29 tevet, 29 eyar, 29 elul;   leap year-  10 shevat, 19 eyar, 29 elul
             society to be forbidden, like adultery (or something comparable).
             Regarding this kind of person it is permissible to believe the Lashon
             Hara spoken about him.

             Be'er Mayim Chayim on page 129

             K7/6.   If in the course of a conversation someone relates something
             that  demeans  both  himself  and  someone  else,  it  is  forbidden  to
             believe what he said about someone else (11) but what he said about
             himself can be believed.

             Be'er Mayim Chayim on page 133

             K7/7.    With  G‑d’s  help  we  will  now  begin  explaining  the  law
             that pertains to believing the Lashon Hara spoken by a man who
             is believed with the same authority as two witnesses, or believing
      Mekor Hachayim  some of the elements of the story are circumstantially known to
             the Lashon Hara mentioned in casual passing by someone who was
             discussing an unrelated subject, or believing the Lashon Hara when

             be true.  Even though the bulk of the law is comparable in these
             cases, still, I have divided them into individual categories because
             there are certain details that are unique to each case which give
             rise to a different halachic outcome.  I have also done this in order
             that people should not become confused because there are so many
             consequences that evolve from each case.  This task I have begun
             with the help of The One Who Bestows Knowledge On Man.
             It is forbidden to accept as truth the Lashon Hara one hears even
             from  someone  who  he  believes  with  the  same  authority  as  two
                                                               th
                                                  th
             witnesses.  What I wrote above in the    Kelal, the    halacha,
             that it is permissible to privately relate the victim’s denigration to
             one’s rav or to someone known to be discrete (if he knows that


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