Showing posts with label Memorial Scrolls Trust. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Scrolls Trust. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Stolpersteine in Horazdovice


Stolpersteine, or "stumbling blocks" are cobblestone-like memorials for individual victims of Nazism that are placed outside the last known residence of the person to whom the memorial is dedicated. The creator of this project is Gunter Demnig - do visit his website.



At the MST we love to hear about the different activities in which our scroll-holders take part that concern our scrolls and the communities whence they came. This past weekend (14th September) was the culmination of many months of work by the Westminster Synagogue Scrolls Committee in London. Their synagogue cares for MST #931 from Horazdovice, and has chosen to sponsor Stolpersteine in memory of the Jews from this Bohemian town.


Starting with the first names on the lists of Jews transported to the concentration camps, Stolpersteine for members of the Adler family:

Jakub Adler
Jindriska Adlerova
Ota Adler
Ruzena Adlerova
Zikmund Mautner

were set into the pavement by Herr Demnig (in the hat) and his assistant.


On his website, Demnig "cites the Talmud saying that 'a person is only forgotten when his or her name is forgotten.' The Stolpersteine in front of the buildings bring back to memory the people who once lived here. Each 'stone' begins with HERE LIVED ... One 'stone'. One name. One person."


Westminster Synagogue members Liliane Fredericks (whose photographs these are) and Cynthia Landes were proud to represent their community in Horazdovice as they stood outside the former Jewish home and witnessed the final piece of a project into which so much care and work have been invested.


It is said that before the Shoah there was a custom in parts of Germany for non-Jews to say when they tripped over a protuding stone "Da liegt ein Jude begraben", i.e., 'there must be a Jew buried here'. Demnig has taken this less than pleasant idiom and created an incredible monument of over 40,000 stones that remind us of all those who have no grave to mark their unjust death.


Monday, 28 July 2014

Summer Closing at the MST Museum


A beautiful and rare colour photograph of Sofer David Brand working on the MST Scrolls!

Now I have your attention, please note that unless you have already arranged a personal tour of the museum, we shall be closed 1-15th August. We shall respond to all voice and e-mail as soon as we return on Monday 18th August.

Thank you for your patience and understanding.

Tuesday, 20 May 2014

Czech Out Our Next Event!


Get your tickets now by telephoning Jonathan Zecharia at Westminster Synagogue (0207 584 3953) or e-mailing him via education@westminstersynagogue.org. There's a lot of interest in this talk so do make sure you reserve your seat as soon as possible!

Friday, 2 May 2014

Faces in the Void at Kent House


Faces in the Void was presented last night at Kent House by Jane Liddell-King and Marion Davies. Despite the terrible weather, several guests were moved by the poetry and photographs recalling the Jews of Pardubice. Here are the presenters with MST chair Evelyn Friedlander at the end of an excellent evening.

Friday, 28 February 2014

Some Photographs from the 50th Anniversary Service Now Online


Here we see five past and present Temple Presidents from Temple Israel of Boston with their scroll, MST #877 from Blatna. This was taken on 9th February 2014, when the Memorial Scrolls Trust celebrated the 50th anniversary of the arrival of the Czech Scrolls by inviting all scroll-holders to bring their torahs to a reunion service at Kent House.

More photographs are available for your viewing pleasure on the MST website, and if you'd like to see them right now, the link is here.

Shabbat shalom!

Thursday, 27 February 2014

MST in the Media This Week

We have once again gathered together recent links to stories and reports about Czech Scrolls lent by the Memorial Scrolls Trust, and the communities that care for them:

The Metro West Daily News published Rabbi Neal Gold's account of his congregational visit that brought MST #779 to our 50th Anniversary service. LINK

NorthJersey.com reported on the actions of Temple Emanuel of the Pascack Valley as they celebrated with MST #974 from Pribram. LINK

The Jewish Chronicle continued to be fascinated with the link to Senator Kerry, as noted on its Diary page. LINK

MST #398, on loan to the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion at its Cincinnati campus, was featured in the weekly Chapel service. LINK

South London Liberal Synagogue reported in its monthly newsletter that MST #217 had taken part in the 50th Anniversary Service. LINK

The text of the sermon preached by Rabbi Andrew Goldstein at Northwood & Pinner Liberal Synagogue at the Erev Shabbat service before our Commemoration Service may be found here:  LINK

Finally, the short film about 9th February 2014 that was made by Dale Bluestein may now be found on the MST YouTube page. LINK

Do let us know if you have any links that we could share with our blogging, tweeting, Facebooking and website friends. Thank you!

Mr & Mrs Jiri Fiedler z"l


the MST is devastated to have received the following news via Helen Epstein:

"I have just learned that Jiri Fiedler, former Director of Research at the Prague Jewish Museum and a great friend to many of us (he was instrumental in helping me research Where She Came From: A Daughter's Search for her Mother's History) was killed at his home this past month. The funeral is next week in Prague. I will forward more information if I receive it and would ask you on the list to do the same. He was a wonderful man. May his memory and that of his wife who died with him, be a blessing."
The book in this photograph is the only one in the MST office that remains always on the desk, ready to help us answer myriad queries about Jewish life in the Czech Republic. 

Mr & Mrs Jiri Fiedler, z"l

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Links to Recent Reports About the Czech Scrolls


Here are a selection of links to recent articles and blogposts responding to the MST 50th Anniversary Service a couple of weeks ago. We hope you enjoy them!

At a sister service that same weekend, Temple Beit Ha-Yam rededicated MST #1254 from Prestice. Read about it here.

Temple Emanu-El of Dallas also planned a rededication service for MST #726 from Klatovy.

Rabbi Neal Gold of Temple Shir Tikva in Wayland MA blogged about his experience at Kent House with MST #779 from Jicin here.

Temple Beth Shalom in New Albany OH posted a set of photographs on Flickr documenting the rededication service they held for MST #131 from the Pinkas Synagogue in Prague. There was also an article about it in the Columbus Dispatch.

The Gloucestershire Liberal Jewish Community brought MST #944 to the service. Read about it here.

Paula Farbman, who with her late husband Leonard arranged the loan of MST #1187 to Temple Oheb Shalom in Baltimore, brought 9 members of her family to our 50th Anniversary Service as a special birthday present to herself. The Baltimore Jewish Times covered the story.

In case you missed it, the UK Jewish News shared some words and a picture here, and the Jewish Chronicle reported on the service here.

Finally, a totally unexpected source of pride was a reference to our celebration by Cameron Kerry, the brother of US Secretary of State John Kerry. Mr Kerry was part of the large group that visited from Temple Israel of Boston, and noted that his daughters read their batmitzvah portions from one of our scrolls. You may find the Huffington Post version of the article here.

Do let us know if your synagogue has featured our scrolls in some way, especially during this anniversary year!



Monday, 17 February 2014

UK Jewish Newspapers' Reports on the Scrolls Service

We were delighted to see that the two major weekly Jewish newspapers in the United Kingdom ran articles last week on the 50th Anniversary Commemorative Service. Here they are for your reading pleasure:


that was in the Jewish News, and this was in the Jewish Chronicle:


The papers did not mention it, but the photograph, and others soon to be available for viewing, were taken by our good friend Rabbi Frank Dabba Smith.

If your local paper has a report about our service, do please let us know and we shall feature it across our social media platforms. It was a great day, and we do want to build on the excitement and good will that it has generated. Thank you!

Monday, 3 February 2014

Czech Out the Newspapers!

In the run-up to the MST Service of Commemoration this Sunday 9th February, we are delighted to see that our scrolls are being featured in their synagogue bulletins and local newspapers. Here are a few examples:

MST #7 at Congregation B'nai Jeshurun in Pepper Pike, and MST #465 at Temple Ner Tamid in Mayfield Heights are featured in the Cleveland Jewish News.

MST #299 at Temple Beth Shalom in Needham, MA, blogged about their scroll being on its way to London

MST #401 at Congregation Kol Ami in West Hollywood, California celebrated our anniversary by passing the scroll from generation to generation.

MST #426 at Temple Beth Shalom in Santa Fe was featured in the Los Alamos Daily Post.

MST #974 at Temple Emanuel of the Pascack Valley NJ was featured in the New Jersey Jewish Standard.

And of course the Memorial Scrolls Trust was featured in the London Times at the end of January. You may read that article here.

We'll post more links as we receive them!


Monday, 27 January 2014

Did You See Us in the Times on Saturday?!

In case you do not have a subscription, which may make it harder to access the article by Jenni Frazer, here is the article in the London Times from 25th January. You might also try the link here.


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Ghostly parchments from the vanished Jews of Mitteleuropa


David Brand at work on a scroll: he spent nearly three decades repairing the parchments and redrawing the lettering
  • David Brand at work on a scroll: he spent nearly three decades repairing the parchments and redrawing the lettering
Jenni Frazer reports on the improbable survival of a precious hoard of 1,500 Torah scrolls
Just over half a century ago two lorries turned into a side road near the Knightsbridge barracks in central London, and a ghostly cargo was unloaded.
Fifteen hundred and sixty four sacred Torah scrolls, collected and catalogued from the war-torn Jewish communities of Bohemia and Moravia, had arrived in London on a dank February morning in 1964, an extraordinary testament to the Czech Jews to whom they had once belonged.
The story of the Czech scrolls is both heartbreaking and uplifting. Collated in near impossible conditions in 1942 by the curators of the Jewish Museum of Prague, the scrolls survived, unlike their cataloguers, few of whom lived through the Nazi Holocaust.
And after the defeat of the Nazis, the scrolls lay forgotten in the disused Michle Synagogue, near Prague, until the communists, desperate for hard currency and looking for goods to sell, stumbled across them.
The scrolls were not the Czech state’s to sell, though this appears hardly to have mattered. The postwar Jewish Museum fought tooth and nail against the sale, but lost. At least 50 scrolls from the Prague collection were sent to the young state of Israel in 1964, although present-day religious authorities in Israel deny all knowledge of them.
At any rate, the Czech communists still wanted to sell the rest: and they did not want to sell them off piecemeal, but only as a complete collection. A London art dealer, Eric Estorick, had been going to Czechoslovakia regularly since the end of the war and became aware of this extraordinary cache of Torah scrolls.
He approached a lawyer and philanthropist, Ralph Yablon, who had helped to acquire Kent House, the Knightsbridge building that became the premises of the Westminster Synagogue.
Yablon spoke to the Westminister Synagogue’s rabbi, Harold Reinhart. The scholar Chimen Abramsky was dispatched to Prague to evaluate the scrolls; and for an undisclosed sum — some say £30,000, some say £80,000 — a deal was done anthe Torah scrolls were sent to London.
Quite why the scrolls were collected and catalogued in Prague in the first place remains a point of contention. For many years it was believed that the Nazis were collecting Judaica in order to establish a Museum of an Extinct Race. But now, according to Evelyn Friedlander, the curator of the present-day collection at Westminster, this idea has been discredited.
“It seems to have been the inspiration of the Jewish community in Prague,” she says. “The city’s Jewish Museum had been established in 1906 and the curators were academics and professionals in their forties and fifties, in the prime of their careers.” One, the librarian, Tobias Jakobovits, was the uncle of Immanuel Jakobovits, the long-serving Chief Rabbi of Britain until 1991.
As the war progressed rural Jews began gravitating towards the bigger cities in Czechoslovakia. So when, in 1942, a letter went out from the Jewish community of Prague asking the far-flung congregations to send their Torah scrolls and other synagogue Judaica to the capital, the Jews of Bohemia and Moravia responded quickly. “Everything,” says Evelyn Friedlander, “was catalogued meticulously. We know where every scroll came from: they were labelled in Czech and German, giving the name of the community or congregation.” Czech, of course: but German, too, because this extraordinary task was carried out under Nazi supervision.
“The curators thought they were saving Judaism by saving the scrolls,” says Mrs Friedlander. Many of the scrolls that arrived in London were tied with a separate cloth binder, some dating from the 17th and 18th centuries. In the 100 volumes of catalogue still in the Prague Jewish Museum, there are also details of where the binders originated, some exquisitely embroidered, some examples of local folk art, some honouring members of the congregation or marking special events such as births, barmitzvahs or weddings.
All the binders were flung in with the Torah scrolls unloaded from the first of the London lorries. On the second lorry, says Mrs Friedlander, “there is a story that there were messages in among the scrolls, scraps of paper saying ‘please help us.’ But no one knows what became of them.”
A team of nine scribes — experts in the parchment on which a Torah scroll is written and the actual inscription of the scroll — was assembled at Westminster Synagogue, to examine every single scroll and recatalogue them. But when that task had finished, it was still necessary to have someone work on the scrolls so that they would be fit to send out on loan to congregations. Minute repairs and meticulous redrawing of the Hebrew lettering can only be carried out by a qualified scribe.
At this point, laughs Friedlander, “a sort of miracle happened”. A man knocked on the door of the synagogue, dressed in full strictly Orthodox clothing, and announced himself as a travelling scribe who wondered if there was any work for him. Did the synagogue, perhaps, have a scroll or two for him to look at?
One can only imagine David Brand’s face when he was ushered in to take stock of 1,564 scrolls. Brand, who now lives in a retirement home in Israel, stayed for 27 years, carefully working on the collection and using the same sort of ancient inks and quills used for centuries by Jewish scribes.
And why was it so important for the scrolls to be restored? Because once they were in the West, hundreds of communities all over the world wanted to use a rescued Czech scroll in their synagogue services. The Westminster curators decided to send out as many as they could on long-term loan. There are thought to be about 1,000 scrolls now in use in North America, and about 100 in the UK. Communities as far apart as Alaska, Puerto Rico and Hawaii have asked for the loan of these iconic Torah scrolls.
On February 9, in Westminster Synagogue, a special service will be held to mark the 50th anniversary of the arrival of the Czech Torah scrolls in London. Many of the congregations which have borrowed a Czech scroll will attend — and will bring their scroll with them, to walk in procession around the synagogue. It will be an impressive and almost certainly emotional sight.
And among the congregation, it is hoped, will be Shlomo Fischl, who now lives in Israel. He comes from Horazdovice, in Bohemia, the congregation whose Torah scroll is now used by Westminster Synagogue

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Press Release from the MST for HMD

21st January 2014

REMARKABLE JOURNEY OF SACRED SCROLLS TO TEACH CHILDREN ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST

The remarkable story of 1600 sacred Torah scrolls rescued from the Holocaust is to form the basis of a new educational resource for school pupils, launched today by the Memorial Scrolls Trust and the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust.

During the war, the scrolls were brought from every corner of Czechoslovakia to Prague by the Jewish community.  Nine out of ten Czech Jews perished in Holocaust leaving the scrolls in storage in a disused Synagogue in the Prague suburbs until they were purchased by a British Philanthropist, Ralph Yablon fifty years ago this February.

Yablon brought them to Britain, arranged for their restoration and helped establish the Memorial Scrolls Trust which distributed the scrolls to every corner of the globe, where they now serve over 1000 communities and have been used in over 100,000 Bar and Bat Mitzvahs (coming of age ceremonies for Jewish children).

Now the story of the scrolls – whose proud holders include the Queen and a US President – has been adapted into an education resource by the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, as part of their many educational resources which encourage and support teachers and educators who want to teach about the Holocaust, Nazi Persecution and the subsequent genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Darfur.

Commenting on the new resource, Memorial Scrolls Trust Chair, Evelyn Friedlander – herself the wife of a Holocaust survivor – says:

“The Holocaust Memorial Day Trust has done a remarkable job in bringing the story of our scrolls to life.  Their journey reflects the incredible journeys of many Holocaust survivors and their rejuvenation at the centre of many new communities is a powerful symbol of the ultimate failure of those who sought to wipe out the Jewish people.”

The Chief Executive of the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust, Olivia Marks-Woldman adds:

“These scrolls can really bring to life the story of the Holocaust – and its survivors – for young people, and engage them through their journey.  Journeys is the theme for Holocaust Memorial Day 2014.  On HMD 2014 we can learn how journeys themselves became part of genocide, and how the journeys undertaken were often experiences of persecution and terror for so many people who suffered in the Holocaust, under Nazi Persecution and in the subsequent genocides.  We can also learn about the life stories of journeys that brought survivors to the UK and how, in many instances, journeys of return have been part of the experience of rebuilding. “

To find out more about the scrolls, to arrange a visit to the Memorial Scrolls Trust’s permanent exhibition at Westminster Synagogue and to download a copy of the educational resource please go to http://www.memorialscrollstrust.org or http://www.hmd.org.uk/content/for-educators, where you will also find many other resources for teaching the Holocaust, including lesson plans, assemblies and classroom activities.


For further information about the resource call Ben Rich on 07713 509134 or the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust on 020 7785 7029

We're in the London Times This Weekend!


As part of the media coverage for Holocaust Memorial Day 2014, the Memorial Scrolls Trust is to be featured in the Times newspaper this Saturday 25th January in the Register section. An article has been written by Jenni Frazer about our work. Czech it out!

Tuesday, 21 January 2014

New Educational Resource Available Now!


The Memorial Scrolls Trust working with the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust has released a lesson plan focussing on the Czech Scrolls as part of this year's HMD theme "Journeys". It may be viewed and downloaded here.

Monday, 20 January 2014

Coming Soon - MST Education Pack


This is MST #931 from Horazdovice, currently in the care of the Westminster Synagogue in London. It is featured in the new Education Pack shortly to be released by the Memorial Scrolls Trust working together with the UK Holocaust Memorial Day organisation. Watch this space ... watch all our spaces, i.e., the blog, the Twitter feed, the FB page and the website for further details!

Thursday, 5 December 2013

The 50th Anniversary of the Arrival of the Czech Scrolls - An Invitation to Scroll-Holders

Dear Friends

On 9th February 2014 people from around the world will gather in London to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the arrival of the Czech Torah scrolls from communist Europe.  The tragedy of these extraordinary relics is that they are often the only surviving relics of some 153 Czech Jewish communities whose members were deported and exterminated in the Nazi death camps during WW2.  The Nazis sent the men, women and children who once used these Torah scrolls to their death, destroying their synagogues and communities but the holy scrolls survived. For 20 years following the war, they remained in a disused synagogue in a Prague suburb until the communist government, in need of hard currency, decided they should be sold. They were thus acquired by Westminster Synagogue and, in 1964, 1564 scrolls arrived in London.  Many of the scrolls were in a pitiful condition – torn, damaged by fire and water – a grim testimony to the fate of the people who had once prayed with them.  

The Memorial Scrolls Trust has given these precious scrolls a second life by lovingly restoring them and loaning them to over 1,400 communities around the world, thereby spreading their message to new generations in diverse communities and institutions such as yours.   

The particular history of these scrolls means that they are dynamic messengers, especially as we near the day when witnesses to the events of the Holocaust will no longer be with us. The scrolls are not only a reminder of the atrocities committed against our brothers and sisters in Europe, but also help us with our renewed mission:

To Remember the Czech communities before the Holocaust
To Challenge us to confront prejudice and hatred
To Inspire us into action to commit to a Jewish life and education, and build bridges across communities

We warmly invite you to join us at a Commemorative Service to be held at Westminster Synagogue, Kent House, London SW7 1BX at 6:30pm on 9th of February 2014.

We hope you can join us for what will be a very meaningful and moving occasion, bringing your Torah with you.  It would be appreciated if you could please RSVP to the following email by January 15th.

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me at info@memorialscrollstrust.org

Wish very best wishes,

Evelyn Friedlander
Chair

Memorial Scrolls Trust

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Have You Heard of Gideon Klein?


As we begin to prepare the liturgy and music for the Memorial Scrolls Trust Service of Celebration on 9th February 2014 at the Westminster Synagogue in London, we thought it might be interesting to introduce you to some of the Czech Jewish composers whose music we hope to feature on that day. Last week we highlighted the work of Pavel Haas. Today we'd like to present the life and works of Gideon Klein.

Born in Moravia, Klein studied composition at university, but when the Nazis closed all institutions of higher learning after occupying Czechoslovakia, he had to continue under the radar. Since Jews were banned from composing and performing, he worked under several aliases as a concert pianist. He was offered a scholarship by the Royal Academy of Music in London but anti-semitic legislation prevented his emigration and  by the end of 1941 he was deported to the concentration camp at Terezin. In fact, this terrible event gave him the opportunity for artistic expression and alongside Hass and Victor Ullmann he became a major composer from the camp. In 1944 he was sent to Auschwitz, and thence to Fuerstengruber, a coal mine c. 20 miles from the extermination camp. He died in January 1945, as the Fuerstengruber camp was being liquidated.

You may learn more about Gideon Klein and his work here.
A discography of his work may be found here.
Listen to some snippets of his music here.

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Buried in Bury

The Memorial Scrolls Trust was on the front page of the most recent edition of the Jewish Chronicle, the main national Jewish newspaper in the United Kingdom. The JC was reporting the schande that is the burial of one of our scrolls. Although it is Orthodox Jewish tradition to bury sacred text that is no longer kosher, the congregation did not have the right to do this because the scroll did not belong to them. It was on loan from the MST. The fact is that they did not even consult the Trust to discuss the matter. Since a torah scroll is made of biodegradable matter it is likely that it has decayed since its burial and thus the prospect of disinterment is unlikely. We are not sure what will happen next.

This is the online text of the JC story:

Buried in Bury: how a synagogue cast historic Sefer Torah aside

By Simon Rocker, August 21, 2013
A Sefer Torah from a historic Czech collection saved from the Nazis has been buried by a Manchester synagogue without permission from the trust that loaned it.
The London-based Czech Memorial Scrolls Trust is furious at the action of Bury Hebrew Congregation and wants the scroll to be returned.
Evelyn Friedlander, chairman of the trust, attacked the burial by Bury shul: “Everyone here is extremely angry. They had no business taking it on themselves to bury it.”
Traditionally, Sifrei Torah which are considered no longer fit for ritual use and beyond repair are buried in a Jewish cemetery.
More than 1,500 scrolls preserved by the Jewish museum in Prague during the Holocaust arrived in London in 1964.
Although some were irreparable, others were restored by the trust, which is housed at the independent Progressive Westminster Synagogue. Over the years 1,400 have been loaned to synagogues across the world.
The 18th-century scroll, loaned to Bury in 1966, comes from Lostice in Moravia. Fifty-nine Jews from Lostice were deported by the Nazis and only three returned after the war.
Mrs Friedlander said, “The scroll is of historical interest.
“They were told at the time that it was on loan and not theirs to dispose of.”
It is unclear when Bury decided to bury the scroll.
Ian Joseph, Bury’s chairman, said this week that “the events referred to with respect to the scroll predate the current shul executive. 
“We will investigate internally the matter and then respond via the appropriate channels with any findings”.
You may also link directly to the JC story here.

Thursday, 20 December 2012

Czech Scrolls Holiday Hours


Greetings to you at this festive season!

The Czech Scrolls office and museum will be closed from 21st December 2012 and will reopen on 3rd January 2013.

Please note that it is unlikely that e-mails and telephone messages will receive a response until we return since we do not have remote access to our machines.

Looking forward to meeting you in 2013!

Thursday, 8 November 2012

Scrolls Reunion

Czech Torah Scrolls from Dale Bluestein on Vimeo.

Earlier this year, scrolls from the MST collection that were previously together in the town of Susice were reunited in a Yom HaShoah memorial service in Princeton, New Jersey. This brief film reports on the event.

The MST is hoping to do something similar in 2014 to mark the 50th anniversary of the arrival of the scrolls in London. If your community has a scroll, why not encourage people to bring it to Kent House on 8th February 2014?! If you start now, you'll have time to save up for the ticket ... and if you watch this film, the rabbi will give you a tip on how to shave a little off the cost :-)