DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 5.4 MB)
What if the Letter Vav Looks like a Yud or a Nun-Sofeet?

The sofer (scribe) must be very careful when writing the letters of a Sefer Torah, tefillin or mezuzot, especially when writing the letter vav. If the vav is written incorrectly, it may look like a different letter. For example, if the vav is not long enough, it may look like a yud. Alternatively, if the vav is too long, it may look like a nun-sofeet. Therefore, it is crucial that the sofer be very careful that the top, and and bottom of the nun are properly shaped and proportioned.

What if the vav looks like a letter yud, or a nun-sofeet? In both cases, the letter is pasul. If the letter is written in a Sefer Torah, then the Sofer must erase the whole letter and rewrite the vav.

However, while this solution is valid and proper when writing a Sefer Torah, tefillin and mezuzot must be written in order. This principle is known as kisidran. Therefore, in these cases, i.e., tefillin and mezuzot, it would not help to add ink or cut part of the letter, because the letter is considered to be written out of order, and the entire portion is invalid.

Sometimes, there is a doubt, and it is not clear whether the letter is too long, and looks like a nun-sofeet, or too short, and looks like a vav. In this case, the halacha teaches that one should bring a child, who is not a hacham and not a tipesh, and ask him to identify the letter. If he says the letter looks like a vav, we validate the Sefer Torah. If he identifies the letter as a nun-sofeet, we disqualify the letter. This is only done if the identity of the letter is unclear. If, however, the letter is clearly too short or too long, the latter is pasul.

Summary: When a sofer writes a vav in a Sefer Torah which is too long, and looks like a nun-sofeet, or too short, and looks like a yud. It may be fixed. If, however, he makes this mistake while writing tefillin or mezuzot, the letter cannot be fixed and the portion is pasul. If there is a doubt, a child is asked to identify the letter, and based upon his statement we determine whether the letter is valid or pasul.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Berachot When Having Coffee and Cake
The Beracha for Mashed Potatoes, Eddge, French Fries, Pringles, and Potato Chips
What Beracha is Required for Small Pieces of Bread if Hot Soup Was Poured on Them?
Leaving Bread on the Table for Birkat Ha’mazon
Does One Recite “Ha’mosi’ on Bread in Soup?
The Beracha Aharona Over Wine Produced in Israel
Eating Dessert After Birkat Ha’mazon on Shabbat to Add Berachot
If One Dropped the Piece of Food Immediately After Reciting the Beracha
Reciting Berachot if One is Drinking or Eating Small Amounts Throughout the Day
Does a Beracha Recited Over a Fruit Cover Another Fruit That is Considered Superior?
If One Recited a Beracha Over Food and Then More Food Was Served
Must One Recite a Beracha Over Wine Drunk During a Meal?
If One Mistakenly Recited a Beracha Over Food When Eating is Forbidden
Does the Beracha of “She’ha’kol” Recited Over Food Cover Beverages?
An Incorrect Beracha That Was Immediately Corrected
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found