DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 2.98 MB)
Klaf Mashuah

Many soferim (scribes) are accustomed to write on a parchment (klaf) known as a klaf mashuah (a coated parchment). Towards the end of the tanning process, the parchment is coated with lime, forming a smooth, white layer on the klaf. This process not only leaves the parchment white, but it makes it easier to write the letters, especially on poor quality parchment.

Some Posekim raise halakhic objections to this practice. For example, is this whitewash considered to be a haziza, i.e., an interruption between the parchment and the ink? Also, the letters are more prone to peel and crumble, especially when touched by the pointer, which may invalidate the Sefer Torah.

The Panim Meirot (3:32) writes that this is the preferred practice, a "hidur," i.e., because it beautifies the mitzvah. Furthermore, since the substance is painted onto the parchment to improve the quality of the writing, it is not considered to a haziza. Therefore, he writes that it is preferable to use a klaf mashuah.

R. Ovadia Yosef (Yehaveh Da’at 6:55), however, writes that one should preferably wipe off any excess lime substance before writing, although he does not invalidate a Sefer Torah written on a klaf mashuah. He adds that while there is sufficient reason to be lenient regarding a Sefer Torah, especially in light of the view of the Rambam (Teshuvot 294) who permits reading publically from an invalid Sefer Torah, it is proper not use a kalf mashuah for tefillin, which is a Biblical obligation.

Finally, since the letters written on a klaf mashuah are slightly elevated, the person reading the Torah with a pointer (yad) should be careful not to chip or peel off the writing.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah- Making a Vessel Kosher for Pesah
Pesah- The Status of Oats on Pesah
May One Allow a Non-Jew Into His Home With Hames on Pesah?
Pesah – Does One Recite the Beracha Over Marror if He Lost His Sense of Taste?
Pesah – Mosi Masa, Marror, Korech, and the Afikoman
Pesah – If One Forgot to Lean While Drinking One of the Four Cups at the Seder
Pesah – May One Place Masa in Liquid?
Pesah – If the Dough is Left Unhandled During the Masa Baking Process
Pesah – The Wine Used for Kadesh; The Special Kiddush Recited When the Seder is Held on Mosa'e Shabbat
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – The Mukse Status of Masa
Pesah- Do We Eat a Hardboiled Egg at the Seder If Pesah Falls Out On Mosa'e Shabbat
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – The Procedure for Shabbat Afternoon
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – the First Two Shabbat Meals
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – Shabbat Hagadol, the Fast of the Firstborn, Bedikat Hames, and Burning Hames
Pesah- Proper Procedures to Follow When Baking Masot
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found