Halakhah Study Group 046
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BET MIDRASH VIRTUALI
of the Rabbinical Assembly in Israel
HALAKHAH STUDY GROUP
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My apologies for the absence of a shiur last week, which was caused by a hardware malfunction. Hopefully, everything is all right now.
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147:3-4
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הגולל ספר תורה יעמידנו כנגד התפר כדי שאם יקרע יקרע התפר: הגולל ספר תורה גולל מבחוץ וכשהוא מהדקו מהדקו מבפנים: הגה: פירוש כשהספר עומד לפניו יהיה הכתב נגד פניו ויתחיל לגלול מבחוץ ואחר שגמר הגלילה יהדק סוף המטפחת בפנים שכשיבא לקרות בו ימצא ההדוק בפנים ולא יצטרך להפך הספר תורה. ונראה דכל זה מיירי כשאחד עושה כל הגלילה אבל עכשיו שנוהגים שהאחד מגביה ואחד גולל הכתב יהיה נגד המגביה וכן נוהגים כי הוא עיקר הגולל והאוחז הספר תורה:
The person rolling the Torah scroll must raise it on the seam so that if it tears it will tear on the seam.
The person rolling the Torah scroll must roll it from the outside but when it is fastened he must fasten it from the inside.Note: This means that when the scroll is raised before him the text should be facing him; he should then start rolling it from the outside and after it has been rolled he should tie the end of the kerchief inside in such a manner as one will find the tie on the inside when one wishes to read [another time from the scroll] he will find the tie easily on the inside and will not need to turn the Torah scroll [in order to find the tie]. Apparently, all this is relevant when it is one person who is doing all the rolling, but now that it is customary that one person raise [the scroll] and another roll it the text side should be in front of the person raising the scroll. This is [now]the custom, for it [hagbahah, the raising of the scroll] is the main element in rolling and holding the Torah scroll. EXPLANATIONS:
1:
Today's shiur contains two paragraphs from section 147 – paragraphs 3 and 4. Both are concerned with how the Torah scroll is handled after the reading is completed. 2: Clearly my comment was either insufficient or unclear, since Harry Pick sent me this learned message: Permit me to point out that the magbi'a, the person honored with hagba'a, viz. raising the scroll after the reading is completed is not the "roller". To correctly perform the lifting of the Tora scroll, it must be spread apart so that three columns of the text are visible to the congregants, and the lifted scroll should be turned to the left and to the right for everyone to see the text. It is only then that the person holding the scroll takes a seat and it would be a most difficult task for that person to hold the tora scroll and to roll it. It is the person honored with gelilah, called up as a golel or goleleth who does the rolling of the scroll. As the title golel indicates "roller"; as we read in the first blessing of the Arvit Shema: Golel Or mipne'i khoshekh… You roll way light before darkness…" As a description of what happens nowadays in congregations that follow Ashkenazi custom what Harry has written is perfectly correct and informative. However, as an explanation of the content of the paragraphs we are studying it is misleading. As I tried to explain – not very successfully, it would appear! – we have here two different usages of the Hebrew terms golel and gelilah. How this came about I shall try to explain in the following paragraph. 3: 4: 5: 6: |


