Maharitz at first decided
Halacha according to the position of the
Shulchan Aruch, but later changed his approach in order to uphold Yemenite Jewish traditions and which were more aligned with the Halachic rulings of Maimonides (
Rambam). In this decision, he was influenced by Rabbi Yehudah al-Ṣa'adi and Rabbi Pinḥas Iraqi HaKohen, men of the previous generation who fought to maintain and to preserve the old Yemenite
Jewish prayer rite amidst trends to change over to the Spanish-rite. Concerning this troublesome time,
Amram Qorah writes: ::"Then were those Rabbis awakened who had always prayed in the
Baladi-rite (Tiklāl), the head of whom was Rabbi Yehudah b. Shelomo al-Ṣa'adi, and the Judge, Rabbi Pinḥas b. Shelomo HaKohen al-Iraqi, of blessed memory, and they wrote proclamations in the form of rabbinic decrees saying that it is forbidden to change the customs of one's fathers which were established according to the words of the
Geonim of old, and [according to] the 'Composition' left to us by Maimonides who came after them." Following in the footsteps of Rabbi
David Abudirham, Rabbi Yiḥya Saleh wrote an extensive commentary on the synagogue liturgy and the old Yemenite Jewish Prayer Book in which he mostly upholds the old practices described therein (e.g. the practice of saying only one
Mussaf-prayer during
Rosh Hashanah, etc.), although he also compromises by introducing elements in the Yemenite prayer book taken from the books of the
kabbalists and the
Shulchan Aruch. He is often seen praising the old Yemenite customs and encouraging their upkeep: ... I have also with me a
responsum concerning the matter of changing our prayer custom, which is in the
Tikālil (Baladi-rite Prayer Books) for the version found in the Spanish-rite Prayer Books, from the Rabbi, [even] our teacher, Rabbi Pinḥas Ha-Kohen Iraqi, ... and he has been most vociferous in his language against those who would change [their custom], with reproofs and [harsh] decrees in a language that isn't very cajoling. May his soul be laid up in paradise.... Still, Maharitz's endorsement of certain
Halachic rulings found in the
Shulchan Aruch was the cause for some Yemenite Jewish prayer-rites being cancelled altogether, and for other extraneous customs introduced by the
kabbalists being added thereto. For a broader discussion on this subject, see
Baladi-rite Prayer. ==Death and legacy==