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Hagbah and Gelila: Difference between revisions

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<p class="indent">Hagba is the ritual lifting of the Sefer Torah to show it to the community. Gelilah is the ritual rolling and dressing of the Sefer Torah and is an accompanying ritual to Hagba.
'''Hagba''' is the ritual lifting of the Sefer Torah to show it to the community. '''Gelilah''' is the ritual rolling and dressing of the Sefer Torah and is an accompanying ritual to Hagba.
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*<p class="indent">After the Torah is read,<ref>Most congregations perform hagba after the Torah has been read. In some congregations it is done before the Torah is read. There are also congregations that perform hagba both before and after the Torah reading. See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:1, 2.</ref> it is lifted for everyone in the congregation to see, a ritual known as hagba. When the Torah is lifted one should make an effort to see the letters of the scroll, to bow slightly, and to say the verse v’zot haTorah.”<ref>OC 134:2.</ref> It is said that a great light shines upon a person who makes an effort to read some of the words from the Torah scroll when hagba is performed.<ref>Mishna Berura 134:11. For much more on hagba see my Amot shel Halacha: Halachich Insights (Jerusalem: Urim, 2009).</ref> </p>
*<p class="indent">After the Torah is read,<ref>Most congregations perform hagba after the Torah has been read. In some congregations it is done before the Torah is read. There are also congregations that perform hagba both before and after the Torah reading. See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:1, 2.</ref> it is lifted for everyone in the congregation to see, a ritual known as hagba. When the Torah is lifted one should make an effort to see the letters of the scroll, to bow slightly, and to say the verse v’zot haTorah.”<ref>OC 134:2.</ref> It is said that a great light shines upon a person who makes an effort to read some of the words from the Torah scroll when hagba is performed.<ref>Mishna Berura 134:11. For much more on hagba see my Amot shel Halacha: Halachich Insights (Jerusalem: Urim, 2009).</ref> </p>
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===Ritual Instuctions===
===Ritual Instructions===
<p class="indent">Those honored with hagba and gelila on weekdays should first remove their tefillin straps from their hands. This is both for comfort as well as to avoid having an interposition between one’s hands and the Torah. It is also intended to show reverence for the tefillin straps.<ref>Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:7.</ref> There are a number of customs as to where the Torah’s belt should be positioned. Some place it on the upper third of the scroll,<ref>Beit Avi 4:15:6.</ref> others on the lower third,<ref>Minhag Chabad.</ref> and some position it right in the center of the scroll. There is no halachic preference.<ref>Maharshag 2:4:2; Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:8. See Chikrei Minhagim (Gurary ), vol. 1, pp. 83–86, and Otzar Teshuva 95 for more on this issue.</ref>  
<p class="indent">Those honored with hagba and gelila on weekdays should first remove their tefillin straps from their hands. This is both for comfort as well as to avoid having an interposition between one’s hands and the Torah. It is also intended to show reverence for the tefillin straps.<ref>Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:7.</ref> There are a number of customs as to where the Torah’s belt should be positioned. Some place it on the upper third of the scroll,<ref>Beit Avi 4:15:6.</ref> others on the lower third,<ref>Minhag Chabad.</ref> and some position it right in the center of the scroll. There is no halachic preference.<ref>Maharshag 2:4:2; Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:8. See Chikrei Minhagim (Gurary ), vol. 1, pp. 83–86, and Otzar Teshuva 95 for more on this issue.</ref>  
</p><p class="indent">The Torah is closed by rolling together the atzei chaim, the handles. One should be sure to position the right eitz chaim above the left one.<ref>Yesodei Yeshurun, vol. 2, p. 257; See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:13 for much more on this issue.</ref> If there is a need to maneuver or adjust the parchment of the Torah scroll one should not do so with his bare hands. Rather, one should touch the scroll with the assistance of a tallit or other cloth in order that one’s hands do not directly touch the parchment.<ref>Mishna Berura 147:2.</ref> All other scrolls, however, such as a Megillat Esther, may be touched directly with one’s hands as long as they are clean.<ref>Rama, OC 147:1; Biur Halacha 147, s.v. “V’tov.”</ref>
</p><p class="indent">The Torah is closed by rolling together the atzei chaim, the handles. One should be sure to position the right eitz chaim above the left one.<ref>Yesodei Yeshurun, vol. 2, p. 257; See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:13 for much more on this issue.</ref> If there is a need to maneuver or adjust the parchment of the Torah scroll one should not do so with his bare hands. Rather, one should touch the scroll with the assistance of a tallit or other cloth in order that one’s hands do not directly touch the parchment.<ref>Mishna Berura 147:2.</ref> All other scrolls, however, such as a Megillat Esther, may be touched directly with one’s hands as long as they are clean.<ref>Rama, OC 147:1; Biur Halacha 147, s.v. “V’tov.”</ref>
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</p><p class="indent">The one who performs gelila should not tie the Torah’s belt in an especially strong or permanent type of knot. Doing so would pose a halachic problem on Shabbat, as one is not permitted to untie a permanent type of knot on Shabbat.<ref>See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:19 at length.</ref> It goes without saying that when performing gelila on Shabbat one may not make a permanent knot. Instead, one should tie the belt with a bow on top of a single knot as is done when tying shoes, a lone bow, or simply to wrap the belt around the Torah and tuck in the ends.<ref>Aruch Hashulchan, OC 317:10; Shemirat Shabbat K’hilchata 15, n. 178; Tzitz Eliezer 7:29; Minchat Shabbat 80:155. </ref> Velcro Torah belts, or those whose ends clip into one another, are ideal and pose no halachic concerns.<ref>Rivevot V’yovlot 2:458.</ref> The one honored with reading the Haftorah should wait until gelila is completed before beginning the preliminary blessings.<ref>OC 147:7; Birkei Yosef 147; Mishna Berura 147:23; Kaf Hachaim, OC 147:40.</ref>
</p><p class="indent">The one who performs gelila should not tie the Torah’s belt in an especially strong or permanent type of knot. Doing so would pose a halachic problem on Shabbat, as one is not permitted to untie a permanent type of knot on Shabbat.<ref>See Rivevot V’yovlot 3:2:19 at length.</ref> It goes without saying that when performing gelila on Shabbat one may not make a permanent knot. Instead, one should tie the belt with a bow on top of a single knot as is done when tying shoes, a lone bow, or simply to wrap the belt around the Torah and tuck in the ends.<ref>Aruch Hashulchan, OC 317:10; Shemirat Shabbat K’hilchata 15, n. 178; Tzitz Eliezer 7:29; Minchat Shabbat 80:155. </ref> Velcro Torah belts, or those whose ends clip into one another, are ideal and pose no halachic concerns.<ref>Rivevot V’yovlot 2:458.</ref> The one honored with reading the Haftorah should wait until gelila is completed before beginning the preliminary blessings.<ref>OC 147:7; Birkei Yosef 147; Mishna Berura 147:23; Kaf Hachaim, OC 147:40.</ref>


=== Torah Types & Hagba ===
===Torah Types & Hagba===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-  
|-  
!colspan="5"| Torah Types & Hagba
! colspan="5" |Torah Types & Hagba
|-
|-
! Torah Types
!Torah Types
! Process
!Style
!When
!Process
|-
|-
| Ashkenazi / Sephardi Torah Scroll (Atzei Chayim)
|Ashkenazi / Sephardi Torah Scroll (Atzei Chayim)
| TBD
|Ashkenazi
|After the Torah reading but before Haftorah
|The entire scroll is lifted during hagba.
|-
|-
| Yemeni Torah (Cylindrical Carrier)
|Yemeni Torah (Cylindrical Carrier)
| TBD
| Sephardi
|Before the Torah reading
|Only the parchment is lifted while the cylindrical carrier is left on the reading table of the bimah. The parchment is not touched with the actual hands but rather with a scarf or tallit between the physcial hands and the Torah.
|-
| Either
|Hybrid Ashkenazi-Sephardi
|Before & after
|Some congregations now mix elements of the two traditions.
|-
|-
|}
|}
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Ezra opened the scroll in the sight of all the people, for he was above all the people; as he opened it, all the people stood up.
Ezra opened the scroll in the sight of all the people, for he was above all the people; as he opened it, all the people stood up.
===Hagba & Gelilah Terminology===
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! colspan="5" |Hagba & Gelilah Terminology
|-
!Action / Process
!Actor (male)
!Actor (female)
!Remarks
|-
|Hagbaha
|Magbiah
|Magbihah
|In the early Sephardi tradition, the process in known as "Levantar" in Ladino, and the actors are known as "Levantadores."
|-
|Gelilah
|Gollel
|Golellet
|In some older traditions, the rolling and dressing processes were once separated instead of the combined duties known today as Gelilah.
|-
|}


==References==
==References==
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===Sources===
===Sources===
<references />
<references />
{{Prayers}}
[[Category:Prayer|Orach Chaim]]
[[Category:Prayer|Orach Chaim]]
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