DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.65 MB)
Must One Repeat Netilat Yadayim During a Meal if He Touches a Sefer Torah, Megilla or Tefillin?

If a person is eating a meal with bread, and in the middle of the meal he touches a Megilla, a Torah scroll, of the straps of the Tefillin, must he wash Netilat Yadayim again before resuming his meal?

The reason for considering such a requirement is the Halacha established by the Gemara in Masechet Shabbat (14) that the parchment of a Sefer Torah is treated as though as it is Tameh (ritually impure). The Sages enacted this measure to discourage the Kohanim from storing their Teruma – the Kohanim’s special food which had to be maintained in a state of purity – with the Torah scroll in the Hechal. The Kohanim did this in order to ensure that the Teruma would remain Tahor (pure), but this resulted in mice entering into the Hechal and gnawing at the parchment of the Torah scroll. The Sages therefore imposed a state of Tum’a upon the parchment, so that the Torah scrolls would not be used for storing Teruma. This decree requires one who touches a Torah scroll to wash his hands before eating Teruma. Even if a Kohen had washed his hands before eating Teruma, and ensured to keep his hands clean, he must wash again if he touches a Torah scroll.

A separate decree was enacted requiring Kohanim generally to wash their hands before they begin eating Teruma. The Halacha we observe to wash before eating bread was instituted because of the requirement to wash before eating Teruma. The Rabbis wanted to accustom the Kohanim to wash before eating Teruma, and so they instituted that everyone wash before eating bread.

The question, then, becomes whether the Rabbis extended this measure so far that one must wash his hands if he touches a Torah scroll during a meal. Did the Sages merely enact a requirement to wash before eating bread, or did they actually compare our bread to Teruma, to the extent that if we touch parchment we must wash our hands before resuming the meal, just as a Kohen would have to wash before eating Teruma?

The Be’ur Halacha (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan of Radin, 1839-1933), in Siman 165 (listen to audio recording for precise citation), cites the Hayeh Adam (Rav Abraham Danzig of Vilna, 1748-1820) as writing that one should seemingly be required to wash his hands before resuming his meal after touching a Sefer Torah. However, the Hayeh Adam adds that since he did not see this mentioned in earlier Halachic works, one should not recite a Beracha over this washing. The Be’ur Halacha disputes this ruling, noting that the Rabbis enacted two separate measures – that Torah scrolls should be regarded as Tameh, and that we must wash Netilat Yadayim before eating a bread meal. These are two distinct Rabbinic enactments, and we should not assume that we can combine them to reach the conclusion that one must repeat Netilat Yadayim if he touches a Sefer Torah during a meal. According to the Be’ur Halacha, then, one is not required to wash in such a case.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Halichot Olam (vol. 1, p. 341; listen to audio recording for precise citation), notes a number of sources in the Rishonim (Medieval Halachic scholars) who indeed seem to follow the Hayeh Adam’s ruling, requiring one to repeat Netilat Yadayim after touching a Torah scroll. He therefore rules that it is proper to wash again in this case, without a Beracha, in accordance with the Hayeh Adam’s view. Hacham Ovadia adds, however, that one who does not wash in this case certainly has authorities on whom to rely.

Summary: If one washes Netilat Yadayim for bread, and at some point during the meal he touches a Sefer Torah, Megilla or Tefillin straps, he should preferably wash his hands again (without a Beracha) before resuming his meal.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Proper Way for Kohanim to Position Their Hands and Fingers During Birkat Kohanim
The Proper Pronunciation of the Name of Hashem
The Importance of Learning Torah at Night
Performing the Misva of Shilu’ah Ha’ken with a Bird’s Nest in One’s Property
Reciting the Verse “Vihi No’am” Before Performing a Misva
Asking Questions To Your Rabbi
Touching a Torah Scroll with One’s Bare Hands
Kissing Somebody After He Received an Aliya
What Kind of Book or Scroll Should be Used for the Haftara Reading?
Shemitat Kesafim- Somebody Who Did Not Write a Prozbul Before the End of a Shemita Year
The Status of Willful Violators of Shemitat Kesafim
Rolling a Torah Scroll in its Case
Studying Torah in a Synagogue or Study Hall; Studying Audibly; Studying with a Partner or Group
The Reading of Parashat Masei at Mincha on Shabbat, Monday and Thursday
Earning a Livelihood - Basic Halachic Guidelines
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found