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Tefillin
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{{Short description|Leather boxes containing parchment with Torah verses}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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caption | A set of tefillin includes the arm-tefillah (left) and the head-tefillah|verse={hide}Unbulleted list |
| {{bibleverse||Exodus|13:16|HE{edih}
| {{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|6:8|HE}}
| {{bibleverse||Deuteronomy|11:18|HE}}
}}|talmud={{Unbulleted list
| Zevachim 37b
| Sanhedrin 4b
| Menachot 34b
| Kiddushin 36a
}}|mishnah=Menachot 3:7|rambam = Tefillin, Mezuzah, veSefer Torah ch 5-6|sa = Orach Chayim weblink" title="archive.today/20130416005106weblink">25-48}}
Biblical source
The obligation of tefillin is mentioned four times in the Torah: twice when recalling The Exodus from Egypt:
may be in your mouth; for with a strong hand did the {{LORD}} bring you out of Egypt.|Exodus 13:9}}
bring us forth out of Egypt.|Exodus 13:16}}
and twice in the shema passages:bring us forth out of Egypt.|Exodus 13:16}}
Etymology
File:Asiatic captive depicted in Tomb of Horemheb in Saqqara.png|thumb|Levantine man wearing arm wrappings and headband similar to tefillin (c. 1300 BCE, Tomb of Horemheb in SaqqaraTomb of Horemheb in Saqqara The word "tefillin" is not found in the Bible, which calls them {{wikt-lang|he|××ת}} ({{transl|he|ot}}, "sign"), {{wikt-lang|he|×××ר××}} ({{transl|he|zikaron}}, "memorial"), or ({{transl|he|á¹oá¹afot}}). The first texts to use "tefillin" are the Targumim and Peshitta and it is also used in subsequent Talmudic literature, although the word "á¹oá¹afah" was still current, being used with the meaning of "frontlet".The ultimate origin of Hebrew "tefillin" is uncertain.BOOK, Sol, Steinmetz, Dictionary of Jewish usage: a guide to the use of Jewish terms,weblink 30 June 2011, August 2005, Rowman & Littlefield, 978-0-7425-4387-4, 165, "Tefillin" may have derived from the Aramaic {{transl|arc|palal}}, "to plead, pray", a word closely related to the Hebrew {{transl|he|tefillah}}, "prayer". Jacob ben Asher (14th century) suggests that "tefillin" is derived from the Hebrew {{transl|he|pelilah}}, "justice, evidence", for tefillin act as a sign and proof of God's presence among the Jewish people.BOOK, Dovid Meisels, Avraham Yaakov Finkel, Bar mitzvah and tefillin secrets: the mysteries revealed,weblink 30 June 2011, 30 April 2004, Dovid D. Meisels, 978-1-931681-56-8, 133, The Biblical word {{transl|he|á¹oá¹afot}}, too, is of disputed etymology. The Septuagint renders "{{transl|he|á¹oá¹afot}}" as ({{transl|grc|asáleuton}}, "something immovable").Phylacteries, Jewish Encyclopedia (1906).{{LSJ|a)sa/leutos|á¼ÏÎ¬Î»ÎµÏ Ïον|ref}}. Some believe it refers to a charm, similar to the Hebrew {{transl|he|neá¹ifot}}, "round jewel". The TalmudSanhedrin 4b explains that the word {{transl|he|á¹oá¹afot}} is combination of two foreign words: means "two" in the "Katpi"{{Efn|Variant: Gadpi}} language (Jastrow proposes: Coptic) and means "two" in the "Afriki" language,The Targum often substitutes the word Afriki for Tarshish, see Kings I 10:22; hence, and means "two and two", corresponding to the four compartments of the head-tefillin.Exodus 13:16, s.v. U'letotafot bein ei'neicha Menahem ben Saruq explains that the word is derived from the Hebrew {{transl|he|Ve'hateif}} and {{transl|he|Tatifoo}}, both expressions meaning "speech", "for when one sees the tefillin it causes him to remember and speak about the Exodus from Egypt".Rashi to Exodus 13:16, s.v. U'letotafot bein ei'neichaBOOK, Saruq, MÄnaḥem ben,weblink Maḥberet Menaḥem, 1854, Ḥoveret Yeshanim, he, According to Jeffrey H. Tigay the word meant "headband" and was derived from a root meaning "to encircle", as ornamental bands encircling the head were common among Levantine populations in the biblical period.Jeffrey H. Tigay, "On the Meaning of Ṭ(W)ṬPT", Journal of Biblical Literature, Vol. 101, No. 3 (Sep., 1982), pp. 321-331The English word "(wikt:phylactery|phylactery)" ("phylacteries" in the plural) derives from Ancient Greek {{transl|grc|phylaktÄrion}} ( {{transl|grc|phylaktÄria}} in the plural), meaning "guarded post, safeguard, security", and in later Greek, "amulet" or "charm".BOOK, The Cambridge Bible for schools and colleges,weblink 30 June 2011, 1908, University press, 175, {{LSJ|fulakth/rion|ÏÏ Î»Î±ÎºÏήÏιον|shortref}}. The word "phylactery" occurs once (in ACC PL) in the Greek New Testament,Woes of the Pharisees, {{bibleverse||Matthew|23:5|131}} whence it has passed into the languages of Europe. Neither Aquila nor Symmachus uses "phylacteries" in their translations. The choice of this particular Greek equivalent to render the Heb. tefillin bears witness to the ancient functional interpretation of the said device as a kind of an amulet. The other Greek words for "amulet" are {{transl|grc|periapton}} or {{transl|grc|periamma}},{{LSJ|peri/aptos|ÏεÏίαÏÏον}}, {{LSJ|peri/amma|ÏεÏίαμμα|shortref}}. which literally signifies "things tied around", analogously to the Hebrew {{transl|he|qameâa}} derived from the root meaning "to bind".BOOK, Miracle or Magic? The Problematic Status of Christian Amulets, Crow, John L., Discussion to Experience: Religious Studies at the University of Amsterdam, 2009, Braak, J., Amsterdam, 97â112,Purpose
The tefillin are to serve as a reminder of God's intervention at the time of the Exodus from Egypt.BOOK, Abraham P. Bloch, The Biblical and historical background of Jewish customs and ceremonies,weblink registration, 1 July 2011, 1980, KTAV Publishing House, Inc., 978-0-87068-658-0, 78â80, Maimonides details of the sanctity of tefillin and writes that "as long as the tefillin are on the head and on the arm of a man, he is modest and God-fearing and will not be attracted by hilarity or idle talk; he will have no evil thoughts, but will devote all his thoughts to truth and righteousness". The Sefer ha-Chinuch (14th century) adds that the purpose of tefillin is to help subjugate a person's worldly desires and encourage spiritual development.BOOK, Stephen, Bailey, Kashrut, tefillin, tzitzit: studies in the purpose and meaning of symbolic mitzvot inspired by the commentaries of Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch,weblink 30 June 2011, 15 June 2000, Jason Aronson, 978-0-7657-6106-4, 31, Joseph Caro (16th century) explains that tefillin are placed on the arm adjacent to the heart and on the head above the brain to demonstrate that these two major organs are willing to perform the service of God.BOOK, Mosheh Ḥanina Naiman, Tefillin: an illustrated guide to their makeup and use,weblink 30 June 2011, June 1995, Feldheim Publishers, 978-0-87306-711-9, 118, Many have the custom to have high-quality tefillin and beautiful tefillin bags as a hiddur mitzvah. This idea comes from the verse "This is my God and I will glorify Him" ({{bibleverse|Exodus|15:2|HE}}). The Jewish Sages explain: "Is it possible for a human being to add glory to his Creator? What this really means is: I shall glorify Him in the way I perform mitzvot. I shall prepare before Him a beautiful lulav, beautiful sukkah, beautiful fringes (Tsitsit), and beautiful phylacteries (Tefilin)."WEB, Holiday Art Beautiful ritual objects enhance holiday celebration.,weblink myjewishlearning.com, 20 January 2024, Beauty enhances the mitzvot by appealing to the senses. Beautiful sounds and agreeable fragrances, tastes, textures, colors, and artistry contribute to human enjoyment of religious acts, and beauty itself takes on a religious dimension. The principle of enhancing a mitzvah through aesthetics is called Hiddur Mitzvah. The concept of Hiddur Mitzvahis derived from Rabbi Ishmael's comment on the verse, "This is my God and I will glorify Him" (Exodus 15:2):, WEB, Greene, Gary, Shabbat Truma Rosh Hodesh,weblink MARATHON Jewish Community Center, 23 July 2014, I think the beauty was important then because it reminded the people of the worth of God in their worship. During the dry and dusty days of desert wanderings, they needed a reminder of Godâs majesty., WEB, Silverberg, Rav David, PARASHAT BESHALACH,weblink The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit Midrash, Yeshivat Har Etzion, Rav Shlomo Ha-kohen of Vilna, in his work of responsa Binyan Shlomo (siman 6), writes that he was once asked why the Gemara never mentions a requirement to purchase beautiful tefillin. Seemingly, tefillin is no less a religious article than a tallit, Sefer Torah or lulav, and thus the obligation of hiddur mitzva should apply equally to tefillin., Some non-Orthodox scholars think that tefillin may play an apotropaic function. For instance, Yehudah B. Cohn argues that the tefillin should be perceived as an invented tradition aimed at counteracting the popularity of the Greek amulets with an "original" Jewish one.BOOK, Tangled Up in Text: Tefillin and the Ancient World, Cohn, Yehuda B., Brown Judaic Studies, 2008, Providence, 88â99, 148, Joshua Trachtenberg considered every ornament worn on the body (whatever its declared function) as initially serving the purpose of an amulet.BOOK,weblink Jewish Magic and Superstition: A Study in Folk Religion, Trachtenberg, Joshua, Behrman's Jewish Book House, 1939, New York, 132, In addition, the early Rabbinic sources furnish more or less explicit examples of the apotropaic qualities of tefillin. For instance, Numbers Rabbah 12:3 presents tefillin as capable of defeating "a thousand demons" emerging on "the left side", rabbis Yohanan and Nahman used their sets to repel the demons inhabiting privies,BT Berakhot 23a-b whereas Elisha the Winged, who was scrupulous in performing this mitzvah, was miraculously saved from the Roman persecution.BT Shabbat 49aJOURNAL, Kosior, Wojciech, 2015, The Name of Yahveh is Called Upon You. Deuteronomy 28:10 and the Apotropaic Qualities of Tefillin in the Early Rabbinic Literature,weblink Studia Religiologica, 48, 2, 10.4467/20844077SR.15.011.3557, Also, tefillin are believed to possess life-lengthening qualities,Suggested in BT Menahot 36b, 44a-b and in BT Shabbat 13a-b and they are often listed in one breath among various items which are considered amuletic in nature.As is the case in M Kelim 23:1, M Eruvin 10:1 and BT Eruvin 96b-97aBOOK,weblink Mahadurah u-Perush 'al Derekh ha-Mehqar le-Pereq "Ha-Motze' Tefillin" mitokh ha-Talmud ha-Bavli ('Eruvin, Pereq 'Eshiri), [PhD thesis, Hebrew], Stollman, Aviad A., 2006, Ramat Gan, 51â54,Manufacture and contents
File:4BranchShinTefillinJosephSherman.jpg|thumb|AshkenaziAshkenazi(File:Tefillin leather box.jpg|thumb|Leather moulded into shape for the head-tefillin)(File:Phylactery (teffilin) case Brooklyn Museum open.jpg|thumb|Silver and leather teffilin case made in Germany in 1885)The manufacturing processes of tefillin are intricate and governed by hundreds of detailed rules.BOOK, Zeʾev, Grinṿald, Shaarei halachah: a summary of laws for Jewish living,weblink 1 July 2011, 1 July 2001, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-434-1, 39,Boxes
In earlier Talmudic times, tefillin were either cylindrical or cubical, but later the cylindrical form became obsolete.BOOK, Norman, Kiell, The psychodynamics of American Jewish life: an anthology,weblink 4 July 2011, 1967, Twayne Publishers, 334, Nowadays the boxes should be fashioned from a single piece of animal hide and form a base with an upper compartment to contain the parchment scrolls.BOOK, Shimon D. Eider, Student Edition of Halachos of Tefillin,weblink 30 June 2011, September 1985, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-050-3, 11, They are made in varying levels of quality. The most basic form, called peshutim ("simple"), are made using several pieces of parchment to form the inner walls of the head tefillin. The higher quality tefillin, namely dakkot ("thin"), made by stretching a thin piece of leather, and the more durable gassot ("thick") are both fashioned from the single piece of hide.BOOK, Shimon D. Eider, Student Edition of Halachos of Tefillin,weblink 30 June 2011, September 1985, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-050-3, 21â22, The main box which holds the tefillin scrolls, known as ketzitzah (קצ×צ×), is cubical. Below it is a wider base known as the titura (ת×ת×ר×). At the back of the titura is a passageway (ma'avarta, ××¢×רת×) through which the tefillin strap is threaded, to tie the tefillin in place.On both sides of the head-tefillin, the Hebrew letter shin ({{Script/Hebrew|ש}}) is moulded; the shin on the wearer's left side has four branches instead of three.Straps
Black leather straps (retsu'ot) pass through the rear of the base and are used to secure the tefillin onto the body. The knot of the head-tefillin strap forms the letter dalet ({{Script/Hebrew|×}}) or double dalet (known as the square-knot) while the strap that is passed through the arm-tefillin is formed into a knot in the shape of the letter yud ({{Script/Hebrew|×}}). Together with the shin on the head-tefillin box, these three letters spell Shaddai ({{Script/Hebrew|ש××}}), one of the names of God.The straps must be black on their outer side, but may be any color except red on their inner side.Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 32:3 A stringent opinion requires them to be black on the inner side too,Shut Shevet Halevi 9:16 but more commonly the inner side is left the color of leather.The Talmud specifies that tefillin straps must be long enough to reach one's middle finger, and records the practice of Rav Aha bar Jacob to tie and then "matleit" (plait? wind three times?) them.Menachot 35b However, the passage leaves unclear where the measuring is done from, whether the reference is to hand- or head-tefillin, and what exactly the meaning of "matleit" is. Combining and interpreting the Talmud's statements, Maimonides, Tur, and Shulchan Aruch ruled that the strap of hand-tefillin must reach from where the tefillin is placed on the arm, as far as the middle finger, where it must be wound three times around the middle finger.Mishneh Torah Hilchot Tefillin 13:12; Tur Hilchot Tefillin 27:8; Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 27:8 Rema wrote that it is not necessary to wind around the finger (rather, the straps must be long enough that one could wind around the finger);Darchei Moshe haKatzar Orach Chaim 27 letter 5 however, this leniency does not appear in his comments to the Shulchan Aruch. In addition to the windings around the finger, the Shulchan Aruch states that the custom is to wind six or seven times around the forearm.Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 27:8Parchment scrolls
(File:Jeruzalem. Oude man maakt doosjes voor gebedssnoeren (tefellin) achter een vollâ¦, Bestanddeelnr 255-2339.jpg|thumb|Man makes boxes for tefillin, Jerusalem, 1964)File:Jerusalem (997009326115605171.jpg|thumb|Man makes tefillins, Jerusalem, 1949. Photo by Boris CarmiBoris CarmiThe four biblical passages which refer to the tefillin, mentioned above, are written on scrolls and placed inside the leather boxes. The arm-tefillin has one large compartment, which contains all four biblical passages written upon a single strip of parchment; the head-tefillin has four separate compartments in each of which one scroll of parchment is placed.BT Menachot 34b This is because the verses describe the hand-tefillin in the singular ("sign"), while in three of four verses, the head-tefillin is described in the plural ("totafot").The passages are written by a scribe with special ink on parchment scrolls (klaf). These are: "Sanctify to me ..." (Exodus 13:1â10); "When YHWH brings you ..." (Exodus 13:11â16); "Hear, O Israel ..." (Deuteronomy 6:4â9); and "If you observe My Commandments ..." (Deuteronomy 11:13-21). The Hebrew Ashuri script must be used and there are three main styles of lettering used: Beis Yosef â generally used by Ashkenazim; Arizal â generally used by Hasidim; Velish â used by Sefardim.BOOK, Shimon D. Eider, Student Edition of Halachos of Tefillin,weblink 1 July 2011, September 1985, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-050-3, 13â14, The texts have to be written with halachically acceptable (acceptable according to Jewish law) ink on halachically acceptable parchment. There are precise rules for writing the texts and any error invalidates it. For example, the letters of the text must be written in order - if a mistake is found later, it cannot be corrected as the replacement letter would have been written out of sequence. There are 3188 letters on the parchments, and it can take a sofer (scribe) as long as 15 hours to write a complete set.What is Tefillin?, www.stam.net. Retrieved 1 July 2011Ordering of scrolls (Rashi and Rabbeinu Tam tefillin)
{{See also|:he:ס×ר ×פרש××ת ×תפ××××}}Talmudic commentators debated the order in which scrolls should be written in the hand tefillin and inserted into the four compartments of the head-tefillin. Rashi held that the passages are placed according to the chronological order as they appear in the Torah (Kadesh Li, Ve-haya Ki Yeviehcha, Shema, Ve-haya Im Shemoa), while according to Rabbeinu Tam, the last two passages are switched around.BOOK, Louis, Jacobs, The book of Jewish belief,weblink 1 July 2011, November 1984, Behrman House, Inc, 978-0-87441-379-3, 128, There are two additional opinions of the Shimusha Rabba and the Raavad, who hold that like Rashi and Rabbeinu Tam respectively, but they hold that the scrolls are placed in the head tefillin in mirror image of those opinions.Tefillin: Shimusha Rabba and RaâavadIt is often claimed that of the tefillin dating from the 1st-century CE discovered at Qumran in the Judean Desert, some were made according to the order understood by Rashi and others in the order of Rabbeinu Tam; however, they in fact do not follow either opinion.WEB, Cohn, Yehudah, The Real Origins of the Rashi, Rabbenu Tam Tefillin Dispute,weblink TheGemara.com, 11 January 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160214075627weblink">weblink 2016-02-14, JOURNAL, Cohn, Yehudah, Rabbenu Tam's tefillin : an Ancient Tradition or the Product of Medieval Exegesis?, Jewish Studies Quarterly, 2007, 14, 4, 319â327, 10.1628/094457007783244619, 40753443,weblink 0944-5706, Nowadays, the prevailing custom is to arrange the scrolls according to Rashi's view, but some pious Jews are also accustomed to briefly lay the tefillin of Rabbeinu Tam as well, a custom of the Ari adopted by the Hasidim.BOOK, Tzvi, Rabinowicz, The encyclopedia of Hasidism,weblink 1 July 2011, 1996, Jason Aronson, 978-1-56821-123-7, 482, The Vilna Gaon, who wore the tefillin of Rashi, rejected the stringency of also laying Rabbeinu Tam, pointing out that there were 64 possible arrangements of the tefillin scrolls, and it would not be practical to put on 64 different sets of tefillin to account for all possibilities.Aharon Lichtenstein, '"Mah Enosh": Reflections on the Relation between Judaism and Humanism', The Torah U-Madda Journal, Vol. 14 (2006-07), p.46 The Shulchan Aruch rules that only "one who is known and famous for his piety" should put on Rabbeinu Tam tefillin,Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 34:3 while the Mishnah Brurah explains that if any other person puts on Rabbeinu Tam tefillin, it is a sign of arrogance.Mishnah Brurah, Orach Chaim 34:16The placement of the protrusion of a tuft of calf hairs (se'ar eigel) identifies as to which opinion the tefillin were written.BOOK, Shimon D. Eider, Student Edition of Halachos of Tefillin,weblink 1 July 2011, September 1985, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-050-3, 21,Obligation and gender
File:Jewish Woman Praying.jpg|thumb|upright|right|A Jewish woman praying with a tallittallitThe legal duty of laying tefillin rests solely upon Jewish males above the age of thirteen years, women are exempt from this obligation. Though no such prohibition existed in ancient times, since at least the Rema in the 16th century,Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim, 38:3. See also Targum Yerushalmi on Deuteronomy 22:5. the prevalent practice among religious Jews has strongly discouraged women from wearing tefillin.The codes view the commandment of tefillin as important, and call those who neglect to observe it "transgressors".BOOK, Isaac David Essrig, The fountain of wisdom,weblink 1 July 2011, 1932, 18, Maimonides counts the commandment of laying the arm-tefillin and head-tefillin as two separate positive mitzvot.Tefillin, Mezuzah, ve'Sefer Torah ch 5-6. The Talmud cites Rav Sheshet, who said that by neglecting the precept, one transgresses eight positive commandments.Menahot 44a A report of widespread laxity in its observance is reported by Moses of Coucy in 13th-century Spain. It may have arisen from the fear of persecution, similar to what had occurred to the Jews living in the Land of Israel under Roman rule in the second century, or possibly due to expense, lack of skill in manufacture, or other social pressures upon Jews in the middle ages.A mourner during the first day of his mourning period is exempt from wrapping tefillin; according to Talmudic law, a bridegroom on his wedding-day is also exempt, but this later exemption is not practiced today. The reason for these exemptions is that the wearer of tefilin must have a constant state of mind intent on the commandment of tefilin, and distractions due to recent death or marriage would be problematic. A sufferer from stomach-trouble who thus can not maintain a clean body, or one who is otherwise in pain and cannot concentrate their mind is also exempt. One who is engaged in the study of the Law and scribes of and dealers in tefillin and mezuzahs while engaged in their work if it cannot be postponed, are also free from this obligation.Historically, the mitzvah of tefillin was not performed by women, but the ritual was possibly kept privately by some women in medieval France and Germany.BOOK, Baumgarten, Elisheva,weblink Mothers and Children: Jewish Family Life in Medieval Europe, Princeton University Press, 2004, 88, Elisheva Baumgarten, 24 February 2023, BOOK, Grossman, Avraham,weblink Pious and Rebellious: Jewish Women in Medieval Europe, 2004, Brandeis University Press, 2004, 978-1-58465-392-9, Waltham, Massachusetts, 178, 194, Avraham Grossman, It has been popularly claimed that Rashi's daughters (12th century) and the wife of Chaim ibn Attar (18th century) wore tefillin,WEB,weblink Women & Tefillin - Congregation Beth ElâKeser Israel, but there is little historical evidence for these claims.Whatâs the Truth Aboutâ¦Rashiâs Daughters? There was not a widely accepted practice of women wearing tefilin prior to 20th century progressive Judaism, though historical sources suggest it was done in some communities prior to the advent of progressive Judaism.WEB,weblink Tefillin 101 - Week Four | Women's League for Conservative Judaism - Jewish Women's GroupWomen's League for Conservative Judaism, 24 January 2019, WEB, 2020-03-30, Tefillin - BJE,weblink 2023-11-24, en-US, In modern times, men have not been the only ones to elect to wear tefillin.NEWS, Friedman, Will, Why Women can and Must Lay Tefillin, Forward, 2014,weblink In 2018, a group of students from Hebrew College, a non-denominational rabbinical school in Boston, created a series of YouTube videos to help women and trans Jews learn how to wrap tefillin.NEWS, Feldman, Ari, Laying Tefillin Isn't Just For Straight Men Anymore, Forward, 2018,weblink Within the Orthodox movement, it remains a male-only religious obligation, but in egalitarian movements, others may observe this practice as a social statement. Women affiliated with the Conservative movement often wrap tefillin.Women and Tefillin : The United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism (USCJ) {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090807190658weblink |date=2009-08-07 }} Since 2013, SAR High School in Riverdale, New York, has allowed girls to wrap tefillin during morning prayer; it is probably the first Modern Orthodox high school in the U.S. to do so.WEB,weblink NYC Orthodox High School Lets Girls Put On Tefillin, Jewish Press News, Briefs, 20 January 2014, The wearing of tefillin by members of Women of the Wall at the Western Wall caused consternation from the rabbi in charge of the site until a Jerusalem District Court judge ruled in 2013 that doing so was not a violation of "local custom".Western Wall Rabbi: No More Tallit and Tefillin for Women at Kotel haaretz, February 1, 2016Use
(File:Jew_in_Podolsk.jpg|thumb|Old man with a tefillin in Podolsk, {{circa|1870{{ndash}}1880}}) File:Tefillin-shel-yad.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Arm-tefillin with ש (shin) pattern, according to one of the Ashkenazi opinions]]Sometimes tefillin were worn all day, but not during the night. Nowadays the prevailing custom is to wear them only during the weekday morning service,Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim 37:2 although some individuals wear them at other times during the day as well. Observant Jews make a tremendous effort to don Tefillin at the appropriate time every morning,WEB, Tefillin,weblink 2023-11-24, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, even in crowded airports. Tefillin are not donned on Shabbat and the major festivals because these holy days are themselves considered "signs" which render the need of the "sign" of tefillin superfluous.On the fast day of Tisha B'Av, Ashkenazim and some Sephardim do not wear tefillin during the morning (Shacharit) service and they are worn instead at the afternoon service (Mincha).Shulchan Aruch OC 555:1. Other Sephardim (following the Kabbalah) wear tefillin at Shacharit as usual.WEB, Rabbi Yirmiyahu Ullman, The Laws of Tisha B'Av, Ohr Somayach,weblinkChol HaMoed
{{see also|Chol HaMoed#Tefillin}}On Chol HaMoed (intermediate days) of Pesach and Sukkot, there is a great debate among the early halachic authorities as to whether tefillin should be worn or not. Those who forbid it consider the "sign" of intermediate days as having the same status as the festival itself, making the ritual of tefillin redundant.WEB,weblinkweblink dead, July 19, 2018, Tefillin on Hol Hamoed, Jachter, Howard, April 7, 2001, Kol Torah: Torah Academy of Bergen County, Others argue and hold that Chol HaMoed does not constitute a "sign" in which case tefillin must be laid. Three customs evolved resulting from the dispute:- To refrain from wearing tefillin: This ruling of the Shulchan Aruch is based on kabbalah and the Zohar which strongly advocate refraining from laying tefillin on Chol HaMoed. This position is maintained by Sephardic Jews and is also the opinion of the Vilna Gaon whose ruling has been almost universally accepted in Israel.
- To wear tefillin without reciting the blessings: This is the opinion of, among others, Rabbi Jacob ben Asher (Ba'al ha-Turim), Rabbi Moses of Coucy (Semag) and Rabbi David HaLevi Segal (Turei Zahav). The advantage of this compromise is that one avoids the transgressions of either not donning tefillin or making a blessing in vain.
- To wear tefillin and recite the blessings in an undertone: This opinion is the ruling of Moses Isserles who writes that this is the universally accepted practice among Ashkenazic Jews. However it may have been in his time, this is no longer universally the case, since many Ashkenazim refrain from wearing it or wear it without a blessing during Chol HaMoed.
Laws and customs regarding putting on tefillin
{{See also|List of Jewish prayers and blessings#tefillin|l1=List of Jewish prayers and blessings: Tefillin}}File:IDF soldier put on tefillin.jpg|thumb|Israel Defense Forces soldier Asael LubotzkyAsael LubotzkyAshkenazi practice is to put on and remove the arm tefillin while standing in accordance to the Shulchan Aruch, while most Sephardim do so while sitting in accordance with the Ari. All, however, put on and remove the head tefillin while standing.BOOK, Zeʾev, Grinṿald, Shaarei halachah: a summary of laws for Jewish living,weblink 4 July 2011, 1 July 2001, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-434-1, 36, Halacha forbids speaking or being distracted while putting on the tefillin. An Ashkenazi says two blessings when laying tefillin, the first before he ties the arm-tefillin: ...lehani'ach tefillin ("to bind tefillin"), and the second after placing the head tefillin: ...al mitzvat tefillin ("as to the commandment of tefillin"); thereafter, he tightens the head straps and says "Baruch Shem Kovod..." ("blessed be the holy name").BOOK, Eliyahu, Kitov, The Jew and His Home,weblink 4 July 2011, 2000, Feldheim Publishers, 978-1-58330-711-3, 488, The Sephardic custom is that no blessing is said for the head-tefillin, the first blessing sufficing for both. Sephardim and many members of the Chabad Orthodox movement only recite the blessing on the head-tefillah if they spoke about something not related to tefillin since reciting the blessing on the arm-tefillah.{{citation needed|date=June 2015}}The arm-tefillin is laid on the inner side of the bare left arm, right arm if one is left handed, two finger breadths above the elbow, so that when the arm is bent the tefillin faces towards the heart. The arm-tefillin is tightened with the thumb, the blessing is said, and the strap is immediately wrapped around the upper arm in the opposite direction it came from in order to keep the knot tight without having to hold it. Some wrap it around the upper arm for less than a full revolution (the bare minimum to keep the knot tight) and then wrap it around the forearm seven times,WEB, Tefillin,weblink 2023-11-24, www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org, while others wrap it around the upper arm an additional time before wrapping it around the forearm. Many Ashkenazim and Italian Jews wear the knot to be tightened (not to be confused with the knot on the base which is permanently tied and always worn on the inside, facing the heart) on the inside and wrap inward, while most Nusach Sephard Ashkenazim and Sephardim wear it on the outside and wrap outward.Then the head-tefillin is placed on the middle of the head just above the forehead, so that no part rests below the hairline. A bald or partially bald person's original hairline is used.BOOK, Louis, Jacobs, The book of Jewish practice,weblink 4 July 2011, 1 June 1987, Behrman House, Inc, 978-0-87441-460-8, 35, The knot of the head-tefillin sits at the back of the head, upon the part of the occipital bone that protrudes just above the nape. The two straps of the head-tefillin are brought in front of the shoulders, with their blackened side facing outwards. Now the remainder of the arm-tefillin straps are wound three times around the middle finger and around the hand to form the shape of the Hebrew letter of either a shin ({{Script/Hebrew|ש}}) according to Ashkenazim, or a dalet ({{Script/Hebrew|×}}) according to Sephardim. There are various customs regarding winding the strap on the arm and hand. In fact, the arm strap is looped for counter-clockwise wrapping with Ashkenazi tefillin while it is knotted for clockwise wrapping with Sephardic and Hasidic tefillin. On removing the tefillin, the steps are reversed.Earlier, Yemenite Jews' custom was to put on arm-Tefillah and wind forearm with strap, making knot on wrist not winding a finger, and then put on head-Tefillah all made in sitting position. {{citation needed|date=December 2023}}Later, Yemenite Jews followed by Shulchan Aruch and put on arm-Tefillah, making seven windings on forearm and three on a finger, and then put on head-Tefillah. Because according to the Shulchan Aruch head-Tefillah and arm-Tefillah are two different commandments, if both Tefillin arenât available, then one can wear the available one alone.Shulchan-Aruch 27German Jews also did not tie a finger earlier. But later they put on arm-Tefillah with a knot on biceps while standing, then put on head-Tefillah, and after that they wind seven wraps around forearm (counting by the seven Hebrew words of {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:16|HE}}), and three wraps around a finger.{{cn|date=December 2023}}(File:Rodrigues-Pereira family Tefillin .jpg|thumb|Tefillin wrapping custom of the Rodrigues-Pereira family )Some Western Sephardic families such as the Rodrigues-Pereira family have developed a personalized family wrapping method.WEB, London Sephardi Minhag - Tephillin,weblink 2020-06-13, sites.google.com, en-US,Biblical commandments
File:Tefillin Text.JPG|right|300px|thumb|Two paragraphs that conclude Parashat Bo are included in the scroll in addition to the first two paragraphs of Shema YisraelShema Yisrael{| class="wikitable"! Location! PassageSee also
References
{{Notelist}}{{reflist}}Further reading
- Eider, Shimon D Halachos of Tefillin, Feldheim Publishers (2001) {{ISBN|978-1-58330-483-9}}
- Emanuel, Moshe Shlomo Tefillin: The Inside Story, Targum Press (1995) {{ISBN|978-1-56871-090-7}}
- Neiman, Moshe Chanina Tefillin: An Illustrated Guide, Feldheim Publishers (1995) {{ISBN|978-0-87306-711-9}}
- Rav Pinson, DovBer: Tefillin: Wrapped in Majesty (2013) {{ISBN|0985201185}}
- BOOK, Cohn, Yehudah, Tangled Up in Text: Tefillin and the Ancient World, 2008, Brown Judaic Studies, 978-1930675797,
- BOOK, Feldman, Ariel, Tefillin and Mezuzot from Qumran: New Readings and Interpretations, 2022, De Gruyters, 978-3110725261,
External links
{{Commons category}}- Halachic sources and diagrams on Tefillin on a commercial site
- weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20090202195144weblink">Many pictures and explanations about Tefillin, the parshiyot and batim
- Educational information and diagrams of tefillin on a commercial site
- Short movie about Tefillin producing process
- How to Guide to Putting on Tefillin
- One who performs all labor and activities with his left hand except for writing, should he be wearing the tefillin shel yad on his right hand?
- Illustrations on how to tie the knot (kesher) in the head phylactery, Ashkenazi and Sephardic methods, pp. 627â630 in PDF.
- Enhance your knowledge regarding Tefillin at Vaad Meleches HaKodesh
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