DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 478 KB)
The Symbolism of the Five Knots of the Sisit

The Sisit, as we know, is tied in five knots on each corner of the garment, and the strings then hang down beneath the series of knots. The Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan of Radin, 1839-1933), in Siman 11, writes that the five knots allude to the five books of the Humash, which we are to bear in mind when we view the Sisit.

Furthermore, the Mishna Berura adds, each of the five knots is tied twice, into a double knot, such that there are actually ten knots on each corner of the garment. The Mishna Berura writes that these ten knots are symbolic of the ten Sefirot ("filters") through which the Almighty’s presence comes into this world – Hochma, Bina, Da’at, Hesed, Gebura, Tiferet, Nesah, Hod, Yesod and Malchut. The knots of the Sisit thus bring to mind the five books of the Torah and the ten Sefirot through which G-d is manifest in the world.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May a Visitor from Israel Receive an Aliya on Yom Tob Sheni?
Is it Permissible for One To Prepare Foods On Yom Tov Even If The One Preparing Will Not Eat It
Yom Tov- Is It Permissible To Invite A Mehalel (Transgressor) Shabbat To Your Home for A Seuda On Yom Tov
Yom Tob Candle Lighting
Immersing in a Mikveh on Ereb Yom Tob
Must Women Light Candles After Dark on the Second Night of Yom Tob?
Preparing on Yom Tob for Shabbat With an Erub Tabshilin
Preparing Fruit Juice on Yom Tob
Preparing Dough on Yom Tob
Visitors in Israel on Yom Tob Sheni
Plumbing Repairs on Hol Ha’mo’ed
Repairing Kitchen Appliances During Hol Ha’mo’ed
Construction During Hol Ha’mo’ed
May a Jew Who Visits Israel on Yom Tob Ask an Israeli to Perform Melacha on the Second Day?
Erub Tabshilin – When Can One Rely on the Rabbi’s Erub?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found