T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1102.1 | Hanging mezuzot is fun! | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Fri Sep 06 1991 00:52 | 38 |
| Check in a siddur for the blessing for affixing a mezuzah - if I
remember right it is only one sentence long, and follows the usual
bracha formula, so you really only need to know what the last three
words are.
The mezuzah goes on the frame of the door (inside of the frame is OK too,
or inside the door if mounting on the frame isn't feasible) at around
eye level. There is a tradition to mount it tilted so that the top is
tipped toward the inside of the room/house/enclosure. You should put
them on doors to real rooms (bathrooms, storerooms, and closets don't
get one), and on gates. If you have an archway that does not contain a
door, if the top of the arch is not the ceiling of the room then it
technically should get a mezuzah but doesn't need one if the opening
doesn't form an archway. Most people don't think you need a mezuzah
for the garage door used by the car, so I don't have one there myself.
Some people only put one on the main entrance to their home.
I think the general opinion is that you do not need mezuzahs for a
building that is not one people live in. That is, if you have a
workshop in the back of your detached garage, or a toolshed, it doesn't
need a mezuzah. Your office doesn't need one either (my office doesn't
have a "door" anyhow). Some people, though, take a larger
interpretation of what spaces they "live" in and put mezuzahs
everywhere they spend significant amounts of time.
For practical considerations: don't put silver or brass mezuzot on
outside doors, or you will be always polishing them! Also, you are
supposed to take them down once in a while (I forget the interval -
maybe 7 years?) to see if the scrolls inside are still kosher. So, you
want to get the type that enclose the scroll in a weatherproof sort of
way for mezuzot on outside doors, or you will end up replacing the
scrolls every time you check them. Only the scroll is important, of
course; it doesn't matter what sort of container, fancy or simple, it
is put in - you can even chisel out a slot in the door frame and put
the scroll in there if you want.
/Charlotte
|
1102.2 | | TAV02::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Wed Sep 11 1991 16:53 | 22 |
| >> What is the correct bracha for putting mezuzot on your doors? The
>> correct algorithm? Thanks.
>> Sid (who bought his house two months ago and still hasn't put the
>> mezuzot on the doors)
boruch atah hashem elokainu melech ha'olam asher kiddishanu
b'misvotav vistivanu likboa mezzuzah
You should hold the mezzuzah case against the desired location,
make the brocha, and fasten it down without speaking or any
other interruption.
The "correct algorithm" is quite simple in theory, but complex
in practice... There are some books on the subject, but it
is usually better to work with a competent Rav.
BTW, the accepted opinion is that you need to affix the mezzuzot
ASAP; some rulings are that the time should be less than 30
days -- some rulings, even less.
don
|
1102.3 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Sep 11 1991 17:20 | 62 |
| I don't think anyone's mentioned that the mezuza goes on the right as you
enter the room. It should be in the top third of the doorway, although
I believe that if that would make it unreachable, it can be lower.
re .1:
> You should put
> them on doors to real rooms (bathrooms, storerooms, and closets don't
> get one), and on gates.
Storerooms and closets *do* require a mezuza if they're large enough
(16 square amos, 36 square feet). I recently realized that we have
three closets that are big enough to require a mezuza. Since kosher
mezuzas are expensive (I paid $40 each), this can be an expensive
proposition.
> If you have an archway that does not contain a
> door, if the top of the arch is not the ceiling of the room then it
> technically should get a mezuzah but doesn't need one if the opening
> doesn't form an archway.
I believe that if there's a doorpost, a mezuza is required even if there's
no lintel. As Don pointed out, a competent rabbi should be consulted for
cases that aren't straightforward.
> Most people don't think you need a mezuzah
> for the garage door used by the car, so I don't have one there myself.
If it's an attached garage that you use to enter the house, I believe that
all authorities hold that a mezuza is required. If it's detached, there
are varying opinions.
> I think the general opinion is that you do not need mezuzahs for a
> building that is not one people live in. That is, if you have a
> workshop in the back of your detached garage, or a toolshed, it doesn't
> need a mezuzah.
Again, many authorities hold that if you use it, even once in a while, it
requires a mezuza.
> Your office doesn't need one either (my office doesn't
> have a "door" anyhow).
I believe the fact that you don't own your office provides the "heter."
> Also, you are
> supposed to take them down once in a while (I forget the interval -
> maybe 7 years?) to see if the scrolls inside are still kosher.
Twice in 7 years (every 3.5 years). There are all kinds of stories about
people having personal problems having their mezuzas checked and finding
them "pasul" (not kosher). A friend of mine who has lost most of her
hearing had her mezuzas checked and found the word "shma" (hear) was
defective.
> you can even chisel out a slot in the door frame and put
> the scroll in there if you want.
There are many houses in the so-called Moslem Quarter of Jerusalem
that have one new stone on the right doorpost. It's clear from this
that these were once Jewish homes despite the claims of the Arabs.
|
1102.4 | | TACT04::SID | Sid Gordon @ISO | Wed Sep 11 1991 17:56 | 29 |
| I believe that in the diaspora, you have 30 days to put it up (maybe
the assumption is that the diaspora is considered temporary unless shown
otherwise), while in Israel the mezuza has to be put up immediately.
>There are all kinds of stories about
>people having personal problems having their mezuzas checked and finding
>them "pasul" (not kosher).
Since some statistics show that 90% of the mezuzot are "p'sulot", this is not
surprising. I'd be interested to hear about people who had "good things"
happen to them, and they checked their mezuzot. Perhaps they would also
find the mezuzot psulot.
There's a tendency (especially among the Lubavitch) to place a great deal
of emphasis on the connection between bad things happening and the mezuzot.
I'm sure there are sources for this (the name "shadai" on the mezuza can be
said to stand for "shomer daltot Yisrael" (Guardian of the Doors of Israel))
implying that the mezuza, besides being a positive commandment (which should
be enough reason to observe it) is some kind of amulet. Maybe I am guilty
of oversimplifying, but it seems to me to border on idol-worship sometimes.
Perhaps this isn't the note to discuss it, but here goes. Isn't the
issue of "zaddik v'ra lo, rasha v'tov lo" (why bad things happen to good
people and vice versa) too important to be explained by a missing letter on
a mezuza? Again, lest I be misunderstood, I am not lessening the importance
of having kosher mezuzot. I just believe the reason for doing so should be
the mitzva itself, and not its connection to "bad things happenning".
Sid
|
1102.5 | 30 days for rentals in Diaspors ... | TAV02::CHAIM | Semper ubi Sub ubi ..... | Thu Sep 12 1991 17:44 | 8 |
| The difference between the diaspora and Israel rergarding waiting 30
days is ONLY with regard to houses/flats which have been rented. If the
house/flat has been purchased then there is NO difference and the
Mezuzah should be put up immediately.
Thanks,
Cb.
|