DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Esther bat Michal

Dedicated By
Her Family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 3.19 MB)
The Klaf Used for Sefer Torah, Tefillin and Mezuzot

The Torah (Shemot 12:13) teaches, in the context of the commandment to don tefillin, "And it shall be to you as a sign upon your hand and as a remembrance between your eyes, in order that the law of the Lord shall be in your mouth."

The gemara (Shabbat 108a) derives from this verse that the parchment, upon which the sofer writes the parshiot, must be produced from a species which is "mutar beficha" (permitted to eat). Therefore, one must use the hides of a kosher animal (behema tehora or haya tehora) or a kosher bird (of tahor). The gemara refers to the species of the animal; however, the animal does not need to be ritually slaughtered (shehita). Also, one may not use the skin of a kosher fish.

Are certain parchments preferred over others? Interestingly, some of the Posekim (see Rama MiPano 37, as well as the Kaf HaHaim) write that it is preferable to write on the skin of an unborn calf (an embryo taken from its mother after being slaughtered), known as ‘or shalil’. This skin is soft and easy to write on. Also, some add that the skin of the young calf is preferred as it has not benefitted from, nor sinned in this world.

The Aharonim also question whether other sefarim (books of the Tanach) may be written on the hides of non-kosher animals? Some (see Beur Halacha 32:12) write that ‘the names of God which may not be erased’ must be written on parchment made from a kosher animal. If the names, however, are only abbreviated, or alluded to, such as a ‘dalet’, then they may be written even on the hides of non-kosher species.



 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Using a Peeler on Shabbat
Drinking From the Kiddush Cup
Adding Water to a Pot of Hot Food on Shabbat
May One Transfer Food From One Hotplate to Another on Shabbat?
Is it Permissible to Smear Butter or Other Foods on Shabbat?
Snapping One’s Fingers on Shabbat
Making Up a Missed Tefila on Rosh Hodesh and Shabbat
Halachot Regarding the Kiddush Cup and How to Hold the Cup During Kiddush
Preparing for Kiddush
The Procedure for Reciting Kiddush and Drinking the Wine
Adding Salt or Spices to a Pot of Food on Shabbat
If One Did Not Recite Kiddush on Friday Night
Customs for When One Arrives Home From the Synagogue on Friday Night
Situations Where Food Cooked on Shabbat is Permissible
Spraying Perfume or Deodorant on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found