DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 8.22 MB)
Can a Sofer Make a Correction After Ink Spills on a Letter?

The Shulchan Arukh (32:1) discusses the important halacha of "hak tochot." The Torah says, regarding the writing of a get, "vechatav lah" (and he wrote for her). The gemara (Gittin 20a) derives from the verse "and he wrote" that the sofer must "write" the letters, and they cannot be carved (vehakak)." This means that the letters must be formed through writing, and not through carving. Therefore, if a blotch of ink falls on the parchment, the sofer must not carve a letter out of the ink, rather, letters must be written. This principle is called "hak tochot."

There are numerous applications of hak tochot. For example, if a sofer is writing the letter "bet," and a drop of ink spills and the letter instead looks like a "peh" and not a "bet," the sofer cannot carve out the extra ink; rather, the entire letter must be carved out and then re-written. As we discussed previously, this may be more difficult when writing tefillin, as the sofer cannot go back and rewrite a letter out of order, as the letters of the tefillin must be written in order, "kesidran,"

The Mishna Berura (32:67) cites an interesting debate regarding the following case. If a sofer wrote part of a letter, such as the top and one of the lines of an "alef" (a letter "yud" attached to a letter "vav), and ink spilled on the letter, can the sofer scrape away the spilled ink, and continue to write the letter? Some Poskim maintain that once the ink spills, the entire letter is invalid and he must erase and rewrite the entire letter. It is clear, however, that according to Maran (Even HaEzer 125:4), hak tochot is only a problem when carving out the ink finishes a letter, and not when the sofer is in the middle of writing a letter.

Summary: A sofer may not form letter by carving out ink which spilled on the parchment. There is a debate regarding whether he may scrape away ink to fix part of a letter before it is finished. Although these halachot may not be very practical for the consumer, it reminds us how important it is to purchase Sifrei Torah, tefillin, and mezuzot from reliable, God-fearing sofrim.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Purim- Laws Regarding the Megila Scroll
Purim – Does One Add Al Ha'nisim in Birkat Ha'mazon if the Meal Ends After Dark?
Purim – Sending Mishlo'ah Manot to a Mourner
Purim – When is the Preferred Time for the Purim Meal?
Handling a Megila on Shabbat
Purim Katan: Haman's Decree and Kashrut
"Purim Katan" – the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Days of Adar Rishon
Purim- Is Megilat Esther Considered Muktze on Shabbat
Purim- Machatzit Ha'shekel
Purim- Reading Haman's 10 Son's Names In One Breath, and Is It Permissible TO Recite The Berachot on The Megila If Less Than A Minyan
Purim- When and How To Recite Havdala When Purim Falls Out On Motza’ei Shabbat
Purim- An Explanation and Understanding of the Page with 10 Names in Megilat Esther
Purim- Some Halachot When Taanit Esther Is Observed On Thursday Prior To Purim That Falls Out On Saturday Night
Is It Permissible for A Sofer To Use Silk Screening Process When Producing a Megilah or Sefer Torah
Purim- Certain Required Characteristics of A Kosher Megilah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found