Anonymous

Four Parshiot: Difference between revisions

From Halachipedia
no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 323: Line 323:
# Someone who has already fulfilled his obligation can still read Zachor again for a different tzibbur. <ref> Chazon Ovadia Purim page 5. </ref>  
# Someone who has already fulfilled his obligation can still read Zachor again for a different tzibbur. <ref> Chazon Ovadia Purim page 5. </ref>  
===Women===
===Women===
Some poskim permit taking out a sefer torah special for the women to fulfill their obligation but without a beracha. <ref> Yalkut Yosef Kriat Hatorah page 136, Chazon Ovadia Purim page 9 </ref>  
# There are many different views as to whether women are obligated to hear parashat zachor in shul or not. <ref>  Binyan Tziyon 2:8 quoting Rav Nosson Adler, Yeshuot Malko OC 50, Maharil Diskin (Kuntres Acharon) 5:101; Minchat Elazar 2:1-5, Chazon Nachum 85. However, Torat Chessed 1:37, Arugot habosem 205, Divrei Chaim 2:14; and Rav Moshe Feinstein, quoted in Kovietz Halachos, page 13 seem to say that the accepted minhag is for women not to go to shul. The Sefer Hachinuch Mitzva 603 notes that since the mitzva of zachor is related to the mitzva to destroy amalek, the mitzva is limited to men who go to war and will fight Amalek. See Sh”t Yechaveh Daat 1:84 </ref>
# Some poskim permit taking out a sefer torah special for the women to fulfill their obligation but without a beracha. <ref> Yalkut Yosef Kriat Hatorah page 136, Chazon Ovadia Purim page 9, Minchat Yitzchak 9:68. See however, Mikraei Kodesh (Purim, 5), Rav Moshe Feinstein quoted in Moadei Yeshurun on Purim page 47, Kovetz Halachot page 15, Kinyan Torah 7:53, Shraga hameir 6:116, and Rav Elyashiv quoted in Halichot Bat Yisrael page 296 who say that there should be a minyan of men for the reading. </ref>  
==Parshat Parah==
==Parshat Parah==
# Some say Parshat Parah is a biblical mitzvah and some it’s a rabbinic mitzvah. <ref>S”A 685:7, Mishna Brurah 685:14 </ref>
# Some say Parshat Parah is a biblical mitzvah and some it’s a rabbinic mitzvah. <ref>S”A 685:7, Mishna Brurah 685:14 </ref>