DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Honor Of
 My Wife Rivka
"To my wife on our anniversary. May our marriage continue to blossom and may Hashem continue to bless us with success and health."

Dedicated By
Anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 808 KB)
Purim – Can a Person Who is Deaf or Hard of Hearing Read the Megila for the Congregation?

May a deaf person read the Megila on Purim for the congregation? Assuming he knows how to read properly, does the fact that he cannot hear disqualify him from conducting the public Megila reading?

From the Gemara’s discussion in Masechet Berachot (15), it appears that a person who cannot hear should preferably not read the Megila for others, but if such a person did read the Megila, the listeners have fulfilled their obligation. This is, indeed, the view of most Halachic authorities, including the Magen Abraham, the Lebush, the Peri Hadash, and many others.

The Shulhan Aruch, however, rules differently, claiming that a deaf person cannot fulfill the congregation’s requirement of Megila reading, even after the fact. If a person who cannot hear read the Megila on Purim, according to the Shulhan Aruch, the listeners have not fulfilled their obligation. In his Bet Yosef, Maran discusses the aforementioned passage in the Gemara and seeks to demonstrate that it does not, in fact, imply that a deaf person’s reading is valid.

Therefore, a deaf person should not read the Megila for others on Purim, and if he does read the Megila, the listeners do not fulfill their obligation through his reading.

If a person can hear with the help of a hearing aid, may he read the Megila for the congregation?

Hacham Ovadia Yosef writes that the Halacha in such a case depends on the extent of the individual’s impairment. If he cannot hear at all without the device, then he has the status of a deaf person and cannot read the Megila for others. If, however, he can hear without the hearing aid, and he wears the device only for amplification, to enhance the sound, then he is not considered deaf and is qualified to read the Megila for the congregation.

Elsewhere, Hacham Ovadia writes that a person who wears a hearing aid should sit near the reader during the Megila reading, at a distance from where he could hear the reading even without the hearing aid. If he sits at a distance from where he could hear the reading only through the device, then he does not fulfill the Misva. He must be close enough to the reader that he is not dependent upon the hearing aid for hearing the Megila reading.

Summary: A deaf person should not read the Megila on Purim for others, and if he does, the listeners have not fulfilled their obligation. If a person is able to hear but wears a hearing aid for amplification, he may read the Megila for others, but if he cannot hear at all without the hearing aid, then he should not read the Megila. A person who wears a hearing aid should sit close enough to the reader during the Megila reading that he would be able to hear the reading even without the hearing aid.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah – The Time for Bedikat Hames
Pesah- The Procedure for Bedikat Hamez
Pesah – Must One Search for Hames in the Areas Containing the Hames That He Sells?
The Special Reading on the First Thirteen Days of Nissan
Pesah – Is it Permissible to Eat Egg Masa on Pesah
Passover- Ve'higadeta Le'bincha - Sitting Next To One's Father-Son During The Hagaddah
Must One Perform Bedikat Hametz if He Goes Away for Pesah?
Pesah – Reciting Me’en Sheba on Pesah Night When it Falls on Shabbat
The Reasons for the Custom of Ta'anit Bechorim
Passover- Avoiding The Problem of A Drop of Hametz In Kosher for Pesach Food
Shabbat Hagadol
Pesah – Selling Hametz in a Case Where One Spends Pesah in a Different Time Zone
Pesah – The Second of the Four Cups of Wine
Laws and Customs of Ereb Pesah
Kimha De’pischa – Donating Charity to the Poor Before Pesah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found