DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 10.53 MB)
May One Use a Microphone for a Zimun?

If a group of people ate together in a large room, such as in a banquet hall, and the person leading the Zimun would not be heard by everybody without the use of a microphone, would it be acceptable for him to use a microphone?

At first glance, this question hinges on the general debate among the Halachic authorities regarding the status of an electronically amplified human voice. Rav Moshe Feinstein (Russia-New York, 1895-1986) was of the opinion that an amplified voice is no different than a normal voice, and one who hears a person’s recitation of a text through a microphone is considered to have heard the recitation directly from the person’s mouth. And thus on Purim, for example, it is acceptable, in the view of Rav Moshe Feinstein, for the reader to read Megilat Ester with a microphone, and all who hear his amplified voice fulfill their obligation no less than they would if he had read the Megila without a microphone. This was also the opinion of the Hazon Ish (Rav Avraham Yeshaya Karelitz, Russia-Israel, 1878-1953).

Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, disagreed. He felt that when a person’s voice is heard through an amplification system, the sound is not the individual’s actual voice, but rather an artificially produced sound. Therefore, if one reads Megilat Ester over a microphone, the audience does not fulfill their obligation, since they are hearing not the reader’s voice, but rather an electronic reproduction of his voice. Hacham Ovadia allowed using a microphone for the reading of Megilat Ester only in a small room, where the reader’s voice can be heard even without amplification, since the people are indeed hearing his voice. But in a large ballroom, where the voice can be heard only through amplification, the Misva cannot be fulfilled with a microphone, since the people hear a new voice produced by the amplification system, and not the reader’s actual voice.

Seemingly, then, according to Hacham Ovadia, it would not be acceptable for the leader of a Zimun to use a microphone, since the others would not be hearing his voice.

However, Rav Yisrael Bitan (in the English edition of Yalkut Yosef – Berachot) drew a compelling distinction between the case of Megilat Ester and the case of Zimun. When it comes to Megilat Ester, the people need to hear the reader’s voice because of the principle of "Shome’a Ke’oneh" – hearing the recitation of a text can be considered like personally reciting it. We are all obligated to recite Megilat Ester, but we fulfill the obligation by listening to the reading, through which we are considered to have read it ourselves. For this Halachic mechanism to work, we must hear the reader’s actual voice. Since we need to be considered as having personally read the text – which is possible only through the mechanism of "Shome’a Ke’oneh" – we require "Shemi’a," that we directly hear the reader’s voice. When it comes to Zimun, by contrast, there is no such requirement. All that is needed is for the leader to summon the rest of the group to recite Birkat Ha’mazon, and this does not require Halachic "listening." In fact, even if the leader made his announcement in sign language, this would suffice, since all that is needed is for the message to get across to the rest of the group. Therefore, it should be perfectly acceptable for the leader to use a microphone for a Zimun, even according to the view of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, not to mention that this would certainly be acceptable according to the view of Rav Moshe Feinstein. (It should be noted that one of Rav Moshe Feinstein’s considerations in permitting a microphone for the reading of Megilat Ester is the fact that the reading is required Mi’de’rabbanan, and not on the level of Torah obligation, which is true of Zimun, as well.)

There are some authors who report that Hacham Ovadia would not use a microphone for Zimun, but Rabbi Bitan dismisses these reports, in light of the compelling distinction noted above. It is worth mentioning that I clearly recall Hacham Baruch Ben-Haim leading the Zimun in the dining room of Magen David Yeshiva with a microphone. It was a very large room, and it would have been impossible for everyone to hear the Zimun without amplification, and yet Hacham Baruch used a microphone, clearly proving that he felt using a microphone for Zimun is acceptable.

If it is possible for the group to break up into smaller subgroups of ten or more men, so they can make a Zimun without a microphone, this would be preferable, but there is certainly room to allow using a microphone for a Zimun, even though we would not allow the use of a microphone for the reading of Megilat Ester on Purim.

Summary: A microphone may be used for a Zimun so that everyone in the group will be able to hear the leader.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is It Permissible To Ask A Goy To Perform A Task During Twilight On Friday Night and Saturday Night
Covering The Bread During Kiddush
Is A Button That falls Off A Shirt On Shabbat Considered Muktze
What Is The Proper Time For Ladies To Dip In The Mikveh On A Friday Night or Yom Tov Night
Spraying Insect Repellent on Shabbat
Asking a Non-Jew to Turn on One's Oven on Shabbat
Placing Roses in a Vase on Shabbat
Nursing or Expressing Breast Milk on Shabbat
Eating or Cutting Food With Lettering on Shabbat
Adding Personal Requests to One's Prayers on Shabbat
Laws of Sovea -Is It Permissible To Use A Napkin To Wipe Strawberries or A Similar Coloring Item From Your Face on Shabbat
The Laws of Tzoveia- Is It Permissible for Ladies To Wear Make-Up On Shabbat
Is It Permissible For A Chazan To Use A Tuning Fork On Shabbat
May A Person Make Netilat Yadayim On Shabbat if There Is Written Ink On His Hands That May Become Erased
The Various Stages of Accepting the "Neshama Yeteira" ("Additional Soul") During the Friday Night Prayer Service
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found