DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 908 KB)
Purim: The Stick of the Megillah

The Megillat Esther is a considered a sacred Sefer (Scripture). One of the components of a Sefer is a stick around which the parchment is rolled. While a Sefer Torah requires two sticks, due to its size, the Megillah requires one stick.
There is a disagreement as to where the stick is placed. Some say that it is placed in the beginning of the Megillah, but the Tosafot and Shulhan Aruch (681:2) hold that the stick is attached to the end of the Megillah. Although the Ashkenazim have a custom not to use a stick at all, Maran clearly requires it, based on the Talmud Yerushalmi which compares the Megillah to a Sefer Torah.

One should not read from a Megillah that does not have a stick and should go out of his way to fulfil this Halacha. It is not difficult to attach such as stick before reading from it. Under extenuating circumstances, B'dieved, if the only Megillah available does not have a stick, Hacham Ovadia (Hazon Ovadia p. 143) rules that it may be used and the Berachot may be recited. He writes that in such a case, one may rely on the Rambam who does not mention the stick as one of the critical components of the Megillah. On the other hand, Hacham Bension (Or Lesion Vol. 4, p. 334) disagreed and ruled that the Berachot may not be recited.

SUMMARY
One should make an effort to ensure that the Megillat Esther has a rod around which the parchment is rolled.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Speaking Words of Torah and Other Matters During a Meal
Reciting "Le'Shem Yichud" Before Performing a Mitzva
Is It Permissible or Required To Donate A Kidney To Save A Life
Recommended Procedures After Experiencing a Dream
Cutting Down Fruit-Bearing Trees
May a Yeshiva Accept a Child Born to a Jewish Mother and Non-Jewish Father?
Teaching Complex Matters of Halacha to Students Who Might Misunderstand
Announcing the New Month on the Shabbat Preceding Rosh Chodesh
Reciting Birkat Ha'levana Before Seven Complete Days Have Passed Since the Molad; Reciting Birkat Ha'levana Indoors
Some Halachot Concerning Hallel
Avoiding Items That Causes One To Forget His Learning
From The Concept of Havilot Havilot- Is it Permissible To Have One Sedua for 2 Siyumim
Eating or Drinking in a Synagogue or Beit Midrash
The Requirement of Mechitza During Prayer and Other Events
Foods and Substances One Must Avoid Due to Potential Risks
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found