DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Avraham ben Chava
"Please say a quick tehillim for Avraham ben Chava and keep him in your prayers for a quick and full recovery"

Dedicated By
Anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 1.04 MB)
Darkening the Letters of Tefillin and Mezuzot by Adding a Second Layer of Ink

There is a debate in the Gemara (Gitting 19) and Rishonim (Medieval Halachic scholars) concerning the case of "Ketab Al Gabeh Ketab" – where a scribe adds a second layer of ink onto the letters in the Tefillin or Mezuza. If a scribe sees that the ink is beginning to fade, and so he goes over the script with an additional layer of ink, which layer is considered the primary script? One view maintains that since there was nothing before the first layer of ink was applied, the "Ketab Tahton" ("lower writing") is considered the primary script of the Tefillin or the Mezuza. The lower script is, after all, the one which transformed blank parchment into a script, and thus it is deemed primary even after it is darkened. The second view, however, argues that when a person looks at the parchment, he sees the upper layer (the "Ketab Elyon"), not the lower layer. As such, the upper layer should be considered the main script of the Tefillin or Mezuza.

Halacha follows the first view, that the original layer of ink is considered the primary script. One practical application of this principle involves a case where only part of the text has begun to fade, and the Sofer wants to darken the letters in question. As we know, the text of the Tefillin and Mezuza must be written in its proper sequence. Thus, if we would view the upper layer as the primary script, darkening certain letters would invalidate the Tefillin or Mezuza, because those letters would be viewed as having been written now, when they are darkened, and the text is thus written out of order. But since Halacha follows the view that "Ketab Tahton Ikar" – the lower layer is the primary script – faded letters may be darkened, as long as they have not completed faded and are still recognizable by a child.

Another application of this rule has to do with the writing of G-d’s Name in Tefillin and Mezuzot. The Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 32) writes that before writing Hashem’s Name, the scribe must verbally declare and have in mind that he writes the Name "Le’Shem Kedushat Ha’Shem" – "For the sake of the sanctity of the Name." If he writes a Name of G-d in the Tefillin or Mezuza without the proper intent, he cannot simply write it again over the original layer of ink with the required intent. Since the bottom layer of ink is regarded as the primary script, adding a second layer will not help in rendering the writing valid. Of course, the Sofer cannot erase the Name, and thus he is faced with a Halachic dilemma which the Poskim address. For our purposes here, however, the point is that he cannot write over the Name, because the original layer will still be regarded as the main script, and the parchment is thus invalid.

Summary: If some letters of the Tefillin or Mezuza are faded, the Sofer can add a layer of ink to darken them, as long as they have not faded entirely and are still recognizable by a child. If a Sofer wrote the Name of Hashem in Tefillin or a Mezuza without the required intent, he may not write over it with an additional layer of ink with the proper intent.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Chanukah- Lighting the Menorah on Friday Night
Chanukah- Starting A Melacaha, Beginning A Meal, and Sitting To Learn Are All Forbidden Within A Half Hour Of Lighting
Chanukah- Should A Wife Light The Menorah At The Proper Time Rather Than Waiting For The Husband Who Will Come Home Later
Chanukah- Should One Say Mezonot On A Fried Jelly Donut That Is Eaten For Dessert
Chanukah- Should We Light The Menorah Before or After The Berachot and Is It Permissible To Light The Menorah At A Chanukah Party
Chanukah- Is A Student Required To Light The Menorah If Dorming Away At School
Chanukah- If One Forgets Al Hanisim in Birkat Hamazon
Chanukah- The Requirement of Lighting Falls Upon The House
Chanukah- Lighting An Extra Candle On Rosh Chodesh Tevet
Chanukah- Why Do We Not Insert A Prayer Of Chanukah In Me’en Shalosh
Chanukah- Can Mourners Say Hallel on Chanukah or Rosh Chodesh, and Is It Permissible To Have An Arayat on Chanukah
Chanukah- Where Should The Menorah Be Placed
Chanukah- Are Ladies Required To Say The Hallel on Chanukah
Chanukah- Should One Recite Again SheAsa Nissim at Menorah Lighting In Shul After Doing So At Home
Chanukah- Should One Recite Again Shehechiyanu at Menorah Lighting In Shul After Doing So At Home
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found