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    WHO MAY FINISH A TORAH SCROLL?

    I. A Gentile Writing
    a Letter in a Scroll?
    On October 7, 2024,
    Senator Lindsey
    Graham visited the
    Western Wall and filled
    in a letter in a new Torah
    scroll written in memory of the victims of the
    terror attacks a year earlier. Senator Graham

    is many things, including staunchly pro-
    Israel, but he is not Jewish. How can someone

    who is not Jewish participate in the religious
    activity of writing a Torah scroll?
    The Gemara (Gittin 45b) learns from the
    two verses about tefillin “U-kshartam…
    U-chsavtam…, And you shall bind… and
    you shall write” (Deut. 6:8-9) that only
    someone who is obligated to wear tefillin
    may write tefillin or a mezuzah. Since a Torah
    scroll has most of the same laws as tefillin
    and mezuzah, a child, a woman and a gentile
    may not write letters in a Torah scroll. If so,
    how could the rabbis allow Senator Graham
    to fill in a letter? This story reminded me of a
    question that arose a year earlier, in advance of
    the Sukkos holiday.

    It is best to have at least two Torah scrolls for
    Yom Tov so you do not have to roll the scroll
    for the different readings. The synagogue near
    the family I was visiting for Yom Tov has a
    borrowed Torah scroll, belonging to one of the
    members. That member went away for Yom
    Tov with his family and took his Torah scroll
    with them. He arranged for the synagogue
    to use someone else’s recently written Torah
    scroll. On the day before Yom Tov, the rabbi
    was rolling the scrolls and noticed that this
    new, borrowed scroll was not finished.
    The words at the end were only outlined.
    Presumably the scribe left those letters as
    outlines so that during the Hachnasas Sefer
    Torah celebration, the owner can honor
    various people to fill in the letters.
    The question arose: is this Torah scroll kosher
    for use by the community? If the scroll is
    not finished because the final letters are not
    filled in, can it be used for ritual purposes?
    The rabbi and I discussed it without reaching
    a conclusion. In the end, we did not need
    an answer because a synagogue member
    arranged for a nearby school to lend the
    synagogue a Torah scroll. However, the
    question is interesting.

    II. What is a Letter?
    Rav Yosef Shaul Nathanson (19th cen.,
    Ukraine) was asked about a Torah scroll in
    which a boy who recently celebrated his bar
    mitzvah wrote a letter. On a biblical level, we
    consider a boy to be an adult once he has two
    lower hairs. On a rabbinic level, reaching the
    age of thirteen and one day suffices. Is this

    Torah scroll invalid on a biblical level be-
    cause this boy is an adult only on a rabbinic

    level? Rav Nathanson answers that writing a
    part of a letter in a kosher way is sufficient.

    Rav Moshe Isserles (Rema; 16th cen., Po-
    land) says that if a witness begins signing

    his name to a divorce without the proper in-
    tent for the couple and then remembers and

    completes his name properly, the signature

    is valid. This is because even a partial writ-
    ing in a proper way redeems the full writ-
    ing (Shulchan Aruch, Even Ha-Ezer 131:9).

    Rema rules similarly that you may not write a
    divorce document with an iron quill because

    the iron might dig into the parchment, engrav-
    ing the letter into it. Since engraved writing

    is not considered writing, that would invalids
    the divorce. However, Rema says that a letter
    is only considered engraved if the whole letter
    is engraved (ibid., 125:4). Rav Nathanson
    concludes that since the scribe wrote part
    of the letter, a child can fill it out and the
    letter is still considered valid (Responsa
    Sho’el U-Meishiv, third rescension, vol. 1,
    no. 390).
    Rav Avraham Yitzchak Glick (19th cen.,

    Hungary) was asked about someone non-
    religious, who does not observe Shabbos,

    filling in a letter in a Torah scroll. He
    permits because until there is testimony in
    court that this person violates Shabbos, we
    do not consider him outside the fold. While
    there is concern that he must have the
    proper intentions when filling in the letter,
    since a scribe stands next to him during that
    time, his presence and instruction suffices.
    Rav Glick explicitly rejects the suggestion
    that an outline is a kosher letter. The
    Gemara (Shabbos 103b) says that writing
    in a Torah scroll has to be complete.
    “U-chsavtam, And you shall write” (Deut.
    6:9) — the writing has to be a kesivah
    tamah, a complete writing. A letter outline
    does not constitute complete writing. If so,
    filling in the letter is the actual writing and
    must be done by someone qualified to be
    a scribe. That excludes children, women,
    gentiles and Jews who do not observe
    Shabbos (Responsa Yad Yitzchak, vol. 3,
    no. 267).
    III. An Outline is a Letter
    However, Rav Malkiel Tannenbaum (20th
    cen., Poland) disagrees. He says that since
    there is no minimum width for a letter,
    an outline is considered a complete letter.

    His only concern is that when someone who
    is invalid to write a Torah scroll fills in the
    letter, he will almost certainly write over
    the initial outline. What remains is a letter
    written by this person, not the outline written
    by the scribe
    (Divrei Malkiel, vol. 4, no. 90).
    Rav Betzalel Stern (20th cen., Hungary)
    argues that when someone fills in a letter
    outline, even if he writes on top of the outline,
    it does not matter. Let us consider the ink that
    the second person uses to cover the outline
    like a white space, as if there is no ink at all.
    Normally, if ink of a letter is removed and
    we see a white space, then that white space
    might be a problem if the remaining letter is

    illegible. However, if we remove this “non-
    kosher” ink the letter is legible. Therefore, the

    additional ink on top of the outline poses no
    problem (Responsa Be-Tzel Ha-Chochmah,
    vol. 4, no. 50). Although Rav Stern adds that
    it is preferable to be strict and follow Rav
    Tannenbaum’s ruling.
    We can now return to the questions with which
    we began. According to Rav Glick, the Torah
    in the synagogue with a few unfilled letters at
    the end is invalid. However, according to Rav
    Nathanson, Rav Tannenbaum and Rav Stern,
    the Torah is kosher even though it still has
    outlined letters because an outline is a kosher
    letter. There was no need to obtain another
    Torah scroll from the nearby school.
    Additionally, according to Rav Nathanson
    and Rav Stern, a child, woman, non-observant
    Jew or gentile may fill in a letter in a Torah
    scroll. Rav Stern might not be comfortable
    with inviting one of those types of people to
    fill in a letter but Rav Nathanson would allow
    it. Additionally, I found that Rav Chaim David
    Ha-Levi (20th cen., Israel) briefly justifies the
    practice of inviting non-observant Jews to fill
    in a letter of a Torah scroll because the outline
    itself is kosher (Responsa Mayim Chaim, vol.
    2, no. 57). He adds that normally anyone who
    writes a letter in a Torah scroll immerses in
    a mikvah before writing. People who fill in
    a letter at a celebration of the completion
    of a Torah scroll do not. Presumably, this is
    because the outline suffices for the letter. If
    you would invite a non-observant Jew to fill
    in a letter, you may also invite a gentile to do
    likewise.