DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 992 KB)
Women Wearing Tefilin and Tzitzit

Are women included in the obligation of Tefilin and Tzitzit?

Although we all know the answer to this question, that women are not required to wear Tefilin, this issue is not as simple as it initially appears. The Gemara in Masechet Eruvin (95) cites the view of two Tanna'im – Rabbi Meir and Rabbi Yehuda – that women are, in fact, included under the obligation of Tefilin. What more, the Gemara records a tradition that Michal, the daughter of King Shaul, wore Tefilin and that the Rabbis of her time did not object to this practice.

However, Tosafot on that Gemara brings a different version of this account from the Pesikta, which tells that the Rabbis of the time indeed objected to Michal's practice of wearing Tefilin. Accordingly, the Shulchan Aruch rules that women are exempt from the obligation of Tefilin, and the Rama, based on Tosafot, write that women who wish to be stringent and wear Tefilin should be admonished to refrain from doing so.

It should be noted that the Targum Yonatan Ben Uziel (an ancient Midrashic, Aramaic translation of the Torah) in Parashat Ki-Tetze translates the verse, "A man's garment shall not be worn by a woman" (Devarim 22:5) as referring to Tefilin and Tzitzit. Therefore, women should be discouraged from wearing Tzitzit or Tefilin.

Why, then, did Michal wear Tefilin, and why did this practice - according to one version – meet with the Rabbis' approval?

The Kabbalists explain that Michal knew that internally she had the "soul of a Zachar." On some Kabbalistic level, her essence was that of a Zachar, and on this basis the Kabbalists explain why she never bore children. Accordingly, her situation was unique and allowed for her wearing Tefilin. Other women, however, should not don Tzitzit or Tefilin.

Summary: Women are exempt from the Mitzvot of Tzitzit and Tefilin, and even if they wish to wear Tzitzit and Tefilin they should be instructed not to do so.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Reciting Birkat Ha'gomel After Childbirth
Reciting Birkat Ha'gomel in Cases of a Recurring Illness, After Fainting, and After a Failed Suicide Attempt
Leaving a Sefer Open After One Finishes Learning
Adding "U'le'chaparat Pesha" in Musaf on Rosh Hodesh During a Leap Year
Birkat Ha'ilanot- Reciting Birkat Ha'ilanot Over the Same Person's Tree Each Year
Wearing A Kippa (Yarmulke)
Extending a Greeting of "Shalom" with One's Head Uncovered
Leaving a Portion of One's Home Unfinished to Commemorate the Temple's Destruction
Hallel: When During the Day May it be Recited, and May One Interrupt to Answer "Amen"?
May a Woman Kiss a Rabbi's Hand When She Approaches for a Blessing?
Employing the Medical Remedies Mentioned in the Talmud
Allowing a Child or Woman to Affix the Sisit Strings Onto a Tallit
When Is It Required and When Is It Not Required To Allow A Kohen To Bypass Waiting On A Line
Affixing the Sisit Strings to the Tallit with the Specific Intent for the Misva
Can A Teacher Punish and Can A Teacher Demand Of Their Students To Divulge A Culprit
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found