Materials to use for S'chach
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One of the most critical parts of the Sukkah is the S'chach, the natural covering of the Sukkah, which provides the shade for the Sukkah.[1]
Basic Requirements of S'chach
- There are three conditions for Schach to be valid. It must be made from a material that grows from the ground, is detached from the ground, and is impervious to impurity (see further for examples). [2] All of these examples are biblical invalidations.[3]
- Material that is grown from the ground but is completely changed from its original form is unfit. [4] For example, paper and cardboard are unfit for Schach. [5] This is a rabbinic invalidation.[6]
Grow from the Ground
Attached to the Ground
- Branches attached to a tree which is still attached to the ground is not fit for schach. Therefore, if one build one's Sukkah underneath a tree, and then decided to detach them from the tree one must shake each branch by lifting and placing back down, otherwise it is not kosher as this is a problem of taaseh vilo min ha'asuy. [8]
Impervious to Impurity
- One may not use food as Schach since it is susceptible to impurity.[9]
- One may use spices which are only meant to be smelled or flowers which are only meant as decoration as Schach since they are impervious to impurity.[10]
Bamboo Mats
Thickness of the Schach
- The S'chach should be made so that there is a majority of shade and minority of sunlight that's let through the S'chach. If there's an equal amount of shade and sun in the actual S'chach it's unfit but if there's an equal amount of shade to light that shines on the floor of the Sukkah it's fit. [12]
- The S'chach should be thin enough that one can see the large stars through the S'chach. [13]
- If one made the S'chach very thick so that one can't see the stars nonetheless it's fit. However, if it's so thick that when it rains a lot water won't come in then it's unfit unless there's no way to remove some S'chach in which case one may rely on the lenient opinions. [14]
- If one made the S'chach very thin so that there's patches of empty space it's fit only if (1) there's no area of empty space larger than 3 Tefachim and (2) there is a majority of shade and minority of sunlight (counting the entire area of the S'chach). Even if it's an acceptable Sukkah, nonetheless, if there's a patch of 7x7 Tefachim which has more sunlight than shade one may not sit in that area. [15]
Schach Held Up by Unfit Items
- It's preferable not to put the S'chach directly on top of walls which are made out of material that's unfit for S'chach.[16] According to most leading authorities, however, it's permissible to place S'chach on top of a material that's fit for S'chach which is in turn held up by something that's unfit for S'chach. Therefore, if one has a metal frame one should place wooden planks on the frame and then S'chach on top of it. [17] After the fact, if the schach was placed directly on metal, it is kosher. [18]
- One shouldn't use schach with a foul odor or whose leaves are falling off because there is a worry that the person may come to leave his sukkah because of the smell or the leaves falling on him. [19] After the fact, it is valid. [20]
Sukkah Built Underneath a Tree or House
- One must ensure that one's Sukkah is under the open sky and not beneath a tree, roof of a house, or a porch. (For details about after the fact see the footnote.) [21]
- If one built a sukkah under a tree or a house which would render it unfit, and then removed the branches or the roof to make it kosher, this isn't a problem of taaseh vilo min ha'asuy as the problem was never in the schach itself. [22]
- A sukkah built under clothes-lines or electric/phone lines, even if there isn't a space of 3 Tefachim between each one, is still kosher, even if clothing is on the lines. [23]
- One may hang lights from the S'chach even if they hang below 4 Tefachim from the S'chach. [24]
S'chach moved due to inclement weather
- If a strong wind blew the schach higher than 3 Tefachim above the sukkah and then fell back down, even though since it happened automatically it wasn't put down for the sake of shade, the sukkah is kosher since it was originally placed in a kosher manner. [25]
- If snow falls and solidifies on top the schach, it doesn't render the sukkah not kosher, and one can still eat in it and some poskim permit saying a beracha of leshev basukkah in this situation. [26]
Positioning of the S'chach
Sources
- ↑ Rashi (Sukkah 2a s.v. delo) writes that the word Sukkah is derived from the word Schach which is the primary part of the Sukkah.
- ↑ The Mishna (Sukkah 11a) indicates that Schach must be grown from the ground, detached from the ground, and impervious to impurity. The source for these requirements acc to the gemara (Sukkah 12a) is the pasuk (Devarim 16:13) which says that the Schach should be made from the materials of the granary and winery. See also Rashi (Sukkah 11a s.v. pesula). Rambam (Sukkah 5:1) and S"A 629:1 codify this as halacha. Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 123 and Chazon Ovadia Sukkot page 14 concur.
- ↑ Biur Halacha 629 s.v. Tzomech
- ↑ Rambam (Sukkah 5:4)
- ↑ Yalkut Yosef 629:14. Minchat Shlomo 112 entertains both the possibility that paper is unfit because it is changed from its original form and because perhaps it is susceptible to impurity.
- ↑ Mishna Brurah 629:12
- ↑ S"A and Rama 629:1, Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 123, Chazon Ovadia Sukkot page 14
- ↑ Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 123, Chazon Ovadia Sukkot page 33.
- ↑ Rambam (Sukkah 5:3)
- ↑ Rav Ovadyah Yosef in Chazon Ovadia (Sukkot, p. 23)
- ↑ Chazon Ovadyah (Sukkot pg 25-6). Halichot Shlomo (pg 128) and Rav Hershel Schachter (min 78-79:30) are also lenient unlike Rav Elyashiv (quoted by Sh"t Shevet HaLevi 6:74) who is strict.
- Tzitz Eliezer 10:29 writes that one shouldn't use reed or straw mats for Schach. The reasoning is that the mats are sometimes used for sitting, sleeping, or containing items in which case they are impure and even if designated to be used for Schach it is unfit as a gezerah. Additionally, sometimes it is used as for roofing in which case they would be unfit as it looks like a real roof.
- ↑ S"A 631:1 and 4
- ↑ S"A 631:3
- ↑ S"A 631:3, Mishna Brurah 631:6
- ↑ S"A 631:2 and 4 rules that if altogether there's a majority of shade and minority of sunlight and there's no open space of 3 Tefachim it's fit. Rama 631:2 adds that some are strict if there's an area of 7x7 Tefachim which has more sunlight than shade. The Aruch HaShulchan 631:5 and Mishna Brurah 631:4 writes that in such an area one may not sit. Mishna Brurah adds that if there's such a patch that breaks up one of the walls so that there's only 2 walls left then it puts the whole sukkah into question.
- ↑ Mishna Brurah 630:59, Chazon Ovadyah (Sukkot pg 44)
- ↑ Mishna Brurah 629:26, BeYitzchak Yikra (Rav Nevensal) on that Mishna Brurah quoting Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach, Yabia Omer 10:46 and Chazon Ovadyah (Sukkot pg 44) are lenient unlike the Chazon Ish 143:2-3. Rav Hershel Schachter (62:30-66:15) also seems to be lenient (listen for exact language). See Chelkat Yaakov 3:127, Minchat Shlomo 2:55 and Moadim u'zmanim 1:82.
- ↑ Mishnah Berurah 629:22 and 630:58
- ↑ Rambam (Sukkah 5:1), Shulchan Aruch 629:14
- ↑ Rambam (Sukkah 5:1)
- ↑ Rama 626:1 writes that in all cases one should avoid building one's sukkah under a tree or roof. Mishna Brurah 626:1 and Aruch HaShulchan 626:1 explain that it's best to build the Sukkah under the open sky. This is also the opinion of Chazon Ovadyah (Sukkot pg 11) and Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 125. However, after the fact, Aruch HaShulchan 626:1 writes if it's built under a roofed area it's unfit, but if it's built under a tree there is a discussion about when it is fit. S"A 626:1 (according to Beiur Halacha s.v. VeYesh, Mishna Brurah 626:10 and 11) rules that a sukkah under branches of a tree is fit only if it fits three requirements (See S"A with Mishna Brurah 626:10 and 11). (1) Among the branches of the tree there is majority of sun and minority shade (2) the there is less than four Tefachim of tree branches over the schach, and (3) there is a majority of shade from the kosher schach and a minority of shade even without the tree branches (and even so the sachach under the tree branches itself is unfit but the rest of the sukkah is fit).
- ↑ Chazon Ovadia page 33.
- ↑ Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 125, Chazon Ovadia Sukkot page 69.
- ↑ Chaye Adam 146, Mishna Brurah 627:15, Nitei Gavriel (Sukkot 26:4)
- ↑ Sh"t Shevet Halevi 10:100
- ↑ Sh"t Ginat Veradim 4:7, Moed Likol Chai 21:20, Bikkurei Yaakov 626:7. Aruch Hashulchan 629:2 however only permits saying a beracha if the schach is still more than the snow. See Yalkut Yosef Moadim page 125 and Chazon Ovadia Sukkot page 37.
- ↑ Shulchan Aruch 631:10