US/World News

Angela Merkel participates in historic Torah scroll writing ceremony

(JTA) – Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel observed the finishing of a refurbished Torah scroll in an event marking Holocaust Remembrance Day in Berlin on Wednesday, Jan. 27. The 18th century Sulzbacher Torah, which survived the National Socialist Kristallnacht pogrom in 1938 and lay unnoticed for decades in a cabinet in a synagogue in Amberg, Bavaria, was brought back to ritually usable condition thanks to a 45,000 euro donation from the German federal government. In June, the Torah will be used once again for services in the Amberg synagogue.

In the Reflection and Prayer Room in the Reichstag, or German parliament building, Merkel sat by as Shaul Nekrich, rabbi of the city of Kassel, inscribed the final 12 letters of the scroll. The chancellor, who will step down following national elections in September, was among several dignitaries who took part in the ceremony. This was one of several events in Germany marking the 76th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz death camp. The ceremony was broadcast on the German parliament’s website.

The Sulzbacher Torah had lain forgotten until 2015, when Rabbi Elias Dray found it in the shrine of the Amberg synagogue, where he officiates. Written for the synagogue in nearby Sulzbach, Bavaria, it had been moved to Amberg in 1934, one year after Hitler took power. It was there unnoticed there for some 70 years. The only damage was due to the “ravages of time,” according to a statement from the Conference of European Rabbis. The local Jewish community could not afford the costs of restoration. Bavarian member of parliament Barbara Lanzinger, who is Catholic, was able to secure German federal funding. The restoration was carried out by Jehuda Freund in Bnei Brak, Israel, and the Torah was kept temporarily at the Jewish Museum Berlin before the completion ceremony. 

“With its ceremonial completion by the highest constitutional, the Sulzbach Torah scroll symbolizes a new pact to protect Jewish life in Germany and to make it possible in the long term,” Dray said in a statement.

Main Photo: German Chancellor Angela Merkel watches Rabbi Shaul Nekrich complete the historic Sulzbach Torah Scroll in Berlin, Jan. 27, 2021. (Odd Andersen/Pool/Getty Images)

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