This Torah scroll from Iraq was rededicated in 2015 (photo: MFA)
The Jerusalem Post reveals the unbelievable tales of Torah scrolls smuggled out of places hostile to Jews. It mentions two scrolls taken out of Iraq and one from Yemen in recent times. (with thanks: Lily)
The Torah scroll being used by Israel’s diplomats is one that enraged
another country – Iraq. Last year, the Foreign Ministry dedicated a
Torah for use at its office synagogue in Jerusalem, that was smuggled
out of Baghdad.
The scroll, estimated to be 150 to 200 years
old, is believed to be from the region of Kurdistan. When most of the
country’s Jews fled to Israel after 1948, the scroll was left behind.
The Iraqi government banned them from taking their property and seized assets from those who left.
The
ministry would not say just how the scroll arrived in Israel, but in
2006 or 2007 it ended up in the Israeli Embassy in Jordan. When, in
September 2011, the Israeli Embassy in Cairo was attacked by a huge
mob, the ministry decided to remove all extraneous items from its
embassy in Amman in case of similar incidents. Among those items was
the Iraqi Torah scroll, which was brought to the ministry in Jerusalem.
In
November 2013, Amnon Israel, the new manager of storage and supplies
for the ministry, noticed the scroll in a storage room on his first
day. He sought out an expert in Torah restoration, and after six months
of work it was ready for use. The government selected a case for the
scroll that originally belonged to the Jewish community of Aleppo,
Syria, and was itself over 100 years old. The special dedication at the
Foreign Ministry took place in January 2015 in front of Sephardi Chief
Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef, and then-foreign minister Avigdor Liberman.
Read article in full
Iraqi Torah scroll finds a new home
Nineeteen Jews brought to Israel from Yemen
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