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Sefer Chafetz Chayim
          Hilchot Esurei Lashon Hara

             Kelal Gimal - Halachah 1

          Hilchot Esurei Lashon Hara

          Kelal Gimal                                    (K3 – 3rd chapter)

          The absence of a distinction (meaning, that it is
          equally forbidden) if the Lashon Hara is spoken
          in the presence of the “victim” (the subject of the
          Lashon Hara) or in his absence. The Lashon Hara
          is forbidden even if it is expressed as a joke or
          even if at the time the Lashon Hara is spoken the
          identity of the victim is not revealed. There are other
          details, explained in this 3rd Kelal which contains 8

                                    halachot.

          Daily Halacha: 7 Cheshvan, 6 Adar, 6 Tammuz;   Leap Year- 7 Cheshvan, 16 Adar I, 26 Sivan

                       Mekor Hachayim

          K 3/1. (Emphatically) How severe is this sin of Lashon Hara, as

          the Torah forbids it in all circumstances even if the remarks are
          true! It is not enough if the speaker disciplines himself to express
          his remarks privately and cautions the listener that he may not
          repeat those remarks to the victim,” the remarks are (nevertheless)
          forbidden! In so doing the speaker invokes upon himself the
          (Torah’s) curse (Devarim 27:24) “Cursed is the person who hits his
          ‘friend \ his fellow Jew’ secretly.” Even if the speaker knows that
          (if he confronted this “victim”) he would (still) make those same
          remarks in front of him (1), even so, the remarks are forbidden and
          they are categorized as Lashon Hara.

          From another perspective, confronting the “victim” directly with
          Lashon Hara is a greater sin than speaking Lashon Hara about him
          when he is not present to hear the remarks. In making those remarks

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