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December 8, 2024
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Rearranging Aliyot to Enable a Levi’s Aliya

לעילוי נשמת
יואל אפרים בן אברהם עוזיאל זלצמן ז”ל

Question: This Shabbat (Vayakhel/Pekudei), the gabbai called up a Levi for shvii, and as ba’al korei, I knew he was going to make a hosafa and give acharon/chazak to someone else. I quickly told him that the Levi cannot come up, but that they should switch with the intended olim, and have the Levi wait for acharon. After leining, someone suggested we should have relied on the Sephardi minhag that Kohanim and Levi’im can have aliyot after the first three. Who was right?

Answer: The reason a Levi gets the second aliyah is to honor his status, which is lower than a Kohen’s and higher than a Yisrael’s (Gittin 59b). Once there is a hierarchy, giving a Kohen or a Levi a lower than prescribed aliyah, especially giving an aliyah after another “tribesmen” can give the impression that one of them is disqualified from his status (see ibid.).

All agree that the three aliyot during the week and the first three of Shabbat and Yom Tov morning are given to Kohen, Levi and Yisrael, in that order. According to Sephardi practice, starting with the fourth aliyah, we can give aliyot to Kohanim and/or Levi’im, as long as it is not to two in a row and that when we call them, we announce “… even though he is a Kohen,” (Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chayim 135:10).

The Rama (ad loc.) says that Ashkenazi minhag is that they cannot get aliyot until after the required seven. However, Ashkenazi minhag has changed somewhat: Kohanim/Levi’im do not get even hosafot except for maftir and acharon, but they can be even back-to-back (Mishna Berura 135:36, based on the Levush). On the side of leniency, even if acharon is one of the seven, the importance of its finishing the reading makes it appropriate for Kohanim/Levi’im (ibid.).

The Taz (Orach Chayim 135:9) points out the “self-fulfilling prophecy” element of these matters. If the rule is that a certain aliyah is appropriate for a Kohen/Levi, then receiving it cannot cast aspersions on them. This observation helps justify Sephardic leniency but makes it more difficult (while still possible) for Ashkenazim to rely upon the lenient opinions, when in the shul at hand, it is not an aliyah that Kohanim/Levi’im receive.

In your case, since the previous Levi received an aliyah long before, aspersions will not go back onto him (see Beit Yosef, Orach Chayim 135). However, in general, we do not leave it up to the Kohen/Levi to decide if they are willing to put up with possible aspersions upon themselves.

On the other hand, halacha does consider other factors in this matter, including the embarrassment of coming up for the aliyah and not being able to receive it (see Mishna Berura 135:35). (It is not fully clear if the embarrassment begins in earnest from the time one’s name is called and he is, thus, expected to get up (see Brachot 55a), or only when he stands by the bimasee ibid. and Mor U’ketzia to Orach Chayim 135). Yet, classical poskim do see your solutionof giving him a subsequent aliyahas a good remedy to embarrassment. The Shulchan Aruch (ibid. 6) says that if a Yisrael was called for the first aliyahdue to absence of a Kohenand then, a Kohen comes in before the Yisrael begins the bracha, the Yisrael waits at the bima until he can get the aliyah. The Mishna Berura (ibid.) embraces that idea for our general case. So, what you did was an excellent way to deal with the situation, and better than ignoring our minhag of not giving aliyot before acharon.

There may have been other viable possibilities. Even if the Yisrael was informed about his aliyah, until he is called up, nothing firmly binds the shul to give him one. Of course, decency calls for keeping one’s word (see Bava Metzia 49a), but mistakes or changed circumstances can legitimize asking the Yisrael to forgo his expected aliyah and “compensating” him in the future. (Which idea was better might depend on a quick appraisal of who is likely to be insulted.) If it was important to give chazak to the Yisrael, it was possible to give maftir to the Levi (when it is fine to split the brachot and the haftarah reading is a good questionsee Rama, Orach Chayim 284:4; Ishei Yisrael 38:56).


This column is written by Rabbi Daniel Mann on behalf of the Eretz Hemdah Institute in Jerusalem, which trains dayanim and has many projects on behalf of Klal Yisrael, including its Ask the Rabbi service in conjunction with the OU. Rabbi Mann is a Dayan at Eretz Hemdah, a senior member of the Ask the Rabbi project, and author of its Living the Halachic Process series. He is also a Ram at Yeshiva University’s Gruss Kollel in Israel.

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