DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 838 KB)
Is It Permissible For A Chazan To Use A Tuning Fork On Shabbat

The Sages enacted a prohibition against playing musical instruments on Shabbat or Yom Tov, out of concern that one may come to build or fix such an instrument, which would constitute a Torah violation.  They further forbade engaging in other activities related to music; thus, for example, according to Sephardic practice, one may not clap or dance on Shabbat or Yom Tov.  (See the Daily Halacha entitled "Door Knocking, Whistling, Clapping, & Making Sounds on Shabbat", dated Dec. 26, 2004)


The question thus arose as to whether a Chazan may use a tuning fork on Shabbat.  A tuning fork is a metal apparatus that a singer strikes to create a sound in the desired pitch.  He puts the fork to his ear to hear the sound, thus helping him find the proper pitch for the given melody.  Would striking a tuning fork be forbidden on Shabbat due to the prohibition of "Hashma'at Kol" – playing music or producing sounds on Shabbat?

Chacham Ovadia Yosef addresses this issue at length in his work Yabia Omer (vol. 3, Orach Chayim 22), where he cites two different views on this issue.  Many authorities permitted the use of tuning forks on Shabbat because it creates a very faint sound; the Chazan must hold the fork near his ear to hear the sound it produces.  Secondly, the tuning fork plays only a single note, and not any sort of tune.  This was the position taken in the work "Ve'zot Le'yehuda," and it is recorded that the cantors in the synagogue of Rabbi Yom Tov Yisrael in Egypt used a tuning fork on Shabbat with the Rabbi's consent.  Likewise, the Aruch Ha'shulchan (work of Halacha by Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein, Byelorussia, 1829-1908) justified the practice to use tuning forks on Shabbat.
 
Many other authorities, however, disagreed, and forbade the use of this instrument on Shabbat.  This is the position taken by the Mishna Berura (commentary to the Shulchan Aruch by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, the "Chafetz Chayim," Lithuania, 1839-1933), in Siman 338 (Se'if Katan 4).

In his work Halichot Olam (vol. 4, p. 73; listen to audio for precise citation), Chacham Ovadia Yosef rules that one should preferably refrain from using a tuning fork on Shabbat and Yom Tov, in deference to those authorities who rule stringently on this issue.  However, one should not object forcefully to those who are lenient in this regard, as they do have authorities on whom to rely.

Summary: Chazanim should not use tuning forks on Shabbat, though one should not forcefully object to those who do use these instruments, as many authorities indeed rule leniently in this regard.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Lag Ba’omer – The Reasons for Celebrating; Reciting Yehi Shem, Visiting Meron, and Other Customs
The Custom of Giving a Boy His First Haircut at Age Three
Visiting Meron on Lag Ba’omer
Lag Ba’omer – Shaving on Friday When Lag Ba’omer Falls on Sunday; The Reason for Celebrating; Fasts, Eulogies and Tahanunim on Lag Ba’omer
Shaving and Haircutting on Lag Ba'omer That Occurs on Friday
Is It Permissible for Sephardim To Take A Hair Cut On The 33rd Day Of The Omer When The 34th Day Falls Out On Shabbat
Sefirat Ha'omer – A Person Who is Unsure Whether He Counted
May Women and Children Take Haircuts During the Omer Period?
Sefirat Ha'omer – May Women Count the Omer?
If a Person Reads a Text Message Informing Him of the Omer Counting, May He Still Count with a Beracha?
Sefirat Ha’omer – The Proper Way to Respond if Somebody Asks Which Day to Count
Guidelines for One Who Forgets to Count the Omer or Cannot Remember if He Counted
Sefirat HaOmer: If One Counted the Days but Not the Weeks
Sefirat Ha’omer – If a Person Counted Either the Days or Weeks Incorrectly
If One Forgets or Doesn't Remember If He Counted The Omer
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found