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1) It is an imitation of Temple ritual, where offerings were prepared
with salt. By bringing bread and salt to a new home, one is making it possible for the people who have just moved to sustain themselves. Written by Amy W. Helfman, Judaica Librarian, HUC-JIR, New York
Traditional Jewish practice about Mezzuzot is that a Mezzuzah should be affixed to every door in a house except for the bathroom, even if there are many rooms in a house and even if the room has more than one door. As long as a door can be used as an entrance and exit, a Mezzuzah should be affixed to the doorpost. It should be affixed to the doorpost on the right hand side of a person entering the room. It should go about 2/3 of the way up the doorpost and be affixed diagonally, with the top of the Mezzuzah slanting in towards the house or the entrance of the room. If the doorpost is not wide enough, the Mezzuzah should be affixed vertically. Before affixing the Mezzuzah, the following benediction is recited:
A service for affixing the Mezzuzah is found in the CCAR publication: On the Doorposts of Your House, page 141. In the Reform tradition, we may interpret the requirements for Mezzuzah as it has individual meaning for each of us. Therefore, you may affix the Mezzuzah only to the exterior doors and principal rooms of the house, if you so desire. Written by Cantor Michael A. Shochet, Temple Rodef Shalom, Falls
Church, Virginia
Second, regarding the usage of the Mezzuzah. Maimonides (Code, Book 2, Laws of Mezzuzah, Chapter 6:13) exhorts readers to be scrupulous in observing the mitzvah of having a mezzuzah since "whenever one enters or leaves a home with a mezzuzah on the doorpost, he will see it and be confronted with the declaration of God's unity.....This thought will immeditely restore him to his right senses and he will walk in the paths of righteousness." According to Maimonides, the essence of the mitzvah of mezzuzah is to SEE it -- it is not necessary to TOUCH it. Further, Maimonides explicitly warns against those who misuse the mezzuzah, presuming it to be an amulet (loc. cit. 5:4). In other words, even if it were not possible for someone to hang their mezzuzah within REACH, they can fulfill both the letter and the spirit of the halacha by hanging it within SIGHT. Third, regarding the touching of the Mezzuzah. The custom appears to have originated with the MaHaRil (Rabbi Jacob ben Moses Boellin, 1360-1427), who based it on a story in the Talmud (Avodah Zarah 11a) in which Onkelos b. Kalonymous the Proselyte touched his mezzuzuah in order to be afforded protection against Roman soldiers who were arresting him. So there is some rabbinic precedent to the custom. The desire to observe this custom, and thereby to mark the separation between the private, sanctified space within and the public, ordinary space outside, appears to be a good example of a positive application of the Reform Jewish principle of seeking renewed meaning to traditional customs and observances. On this ground, I might be inclined to support it, even in the unlikely circumstance that the door is so high, or the people so short, that they cannot possibly reach the mezzuzah within the rather broad halachic guidelines above. However, even in that instance, one must consider the principle of Marit Ayin (appearance to others) -- and be concerned that acquaintances, possessed of less intense Jewish identity and literacy, might see the lower-than-usual mezzuzah and conclude that that is the normal, appropriate height at which to hang it. This might then mislead their own practice, even if there were no need to do so. In conclusion -- depending on the height of the door, it seems likely that the mezzuzah can be hung at a height which fulfills the halacha and can still be within reach. If not, the mitzvah of mezzuzah can still be fulfilled if it is within sight, even if not within reach. I would counsel against hanging it lower, since: [a] to do so is not halachically permissible; Written by Rabbi Ramie Arian, Vice President of the Wexner Heritage Foundation, a privately funded Jewish educational foundation. |
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