Ogden Jewish congregation sees Torah from Poland that survived WWII horrors

 

OgdenJewish

 

 

 

Members of Ogden’s Jewish congregation view a Torah that survived the Holocaust. Credit: Ramin Rahimian, Standard-Examiner

By JaNae Francis (Standard-Examiner staff)
Apr 23, 2010

OGDEN — The memory of 6 million men, women and children killed during the Holocaust received special honor last weekend when members of Ogden’s Jewish Congregation Brith Sholem used a Torah scroll that survived the devastation for their Yom HaShoah memorial service.

It was the first time the relic from World War II has come to the Ogden congregation.

While Jewish congregations work hard to keep in good repair their Torah scrolls that feature roughly the Old Testament written in Hebrew, this scroll showed signs of obvious wear and tear.

That’s because it was a remnant of many Torah scrolls buried by rabbis in a burial ground during that time of devastation in order to keep their scared writings from desecration at the hands of the Nazis.

The scroll consisted of sewn together parts of these scrolls that were unearthed by those living in a Jewish concentration camp who were allowed to leave for work duty from the Yanov concentration camp in Poland.

The prisoners would visit the burial ground, dig up the buried scrolls and cut parts of them out and smuggle them back into camp for their fellow prisoners to read and study.

“They risked their lives every time they would do this,” said student Rabbi Aron Klein, who read from the scroll during last weekend’s services.

“They knew they would be killed even if they were caught praying.”

Klein told a story of Ludovic Wurmfeld, a prisoner at the Yanov camp.

“Because he was deaf, the Nazi guards thought he was dim-witted, and he was allowed to leave the work camp regularly because the guards did not perceive him as a threat,” Klein said.

“Every time Ludovic returned from the town, he was wrapped in the words of Torah,” he said. “Columns of Torah were curled around his legs and sewn into his jacket.”

Wurmfeld’s efforts may have brought comfort to others at that time, but years later, they returned solace to him.

After the Holocaust ended, poor Jewish people gathered the pieces of Torah scrolls together and sewed them into a complete Torah.

This scroll at first was passed down to family members of those who had rescued the sacred writings but eventually the scroll made its way to the United States and came to be under the direction of Rabbi Erwin Herman.

“Twenty some years ago, Rabbi Herman took this Torah to Temple Beth Solomon of the Deaf in Los Angeles,” Klein said. “As Rabbi Herman was talking about the Torah, a man from the congregation stood up in the middle of the rabbi’s address and began walking toward the Torah.

“As he approached, in sign language he said over and over again, ‘That’s my Torah. That’s my Torah.’ “

That man was Wurmfeld.

Klein encouraged those at the remembrance service to also learn to follow their faith through unimaginable journeys from darkness to light.

“With each journey, like the Yanov Torah, we acquire new physical and spiritual scars that we carry with us forever,” he said. “These scars are the reminders both of our fragile faith and the need to mend it.”

Klein said experiencing the Yanov Torah reminds people of the courage, strength and enduring faith of those who previously took care of it.

“May their legacy inspire us to journey inward to discover our own courage, summon our own strength, and fortify our own faith and our tradition, which is sewn together with the threads of beauty and struggle,” he said. “Through our journeys, through our brokenness, and through our attempts at repair, we too will be able to stand up, carry close our fragile faith and say, ‘That’s my Torah. That’s my Torah.’ “

http://www.standard.net/topics/featured/2010/04/23/ogden-jewish-congregation-sees-torahl-poland-survived-wwii-horrors

Thanks to Washington Society for Jewish Deaf (WSJD).

OGDEN — The memory of 6 million men, women

and children killed during the Holocaust

received special honor last weekend when

members of Ogden’s Jewish Congregation Brith

Sholem used a Torah scroll that survived the

devastation for their Yom HaShoah memorial

service.

It was the first time the relic from World

War II has come to the Ogden congregation.

While Jewish congregations work hard to keep

in good repair their Torah scrolls that

feature roughly the Old Testament written in

Hebrew, this scroll showed signs of obvious

wear and tear.

That’s because it was a remnant of many Torah

scrolls buried by rabbis in a burial ground

during that time of devastation in order to

keep their scared writings from desecration

at the hands of the Nazis.

The scroll consisted of sewn together parts

of these scrolls that were unearthed by those

living in a Jewish concentration camp who

were allowed to leave for work duty from the

Yanov concentration camp in Poland.

The prisoners would visit the burial ground,

dig up the buried scrolls and cut parts of

them out and smuggle them back into camp for

their fellow prisoners to read and study.

“They risked their lives every time they

would do this,” said student Rabbi Aron

Klein, who read from the scroll during last

weekend’s services.

“They knew they would be killed even if they

were caught praying.”

Klein told a story of Ludovic Wurmfeld, a

prisoner at the Yanov camp.

“Because he was deaf, the Nazi guards thought

he was dim-witted, and he was allowed to

leave the work camp regularly because the

guards did not perceive him as a threat,”

Klein said.

“Every time Ludovic returned from the town,

he was wrapped in the words of Torah,” he

said. “Columns of Torah were curled around

his legs and sewn into his jacket.”

Wurmfeld’s efforts may have brought comfort

to others at that time, but years later, they

returned solace to him.

After the Holocaust ended, poor Jewish people

gathered the pieces of Torah scrolls together

and sewed them into a complete Torah.

This scroll at first was passed down to

family members of those who had rescued the

sacred writings but eventually the scroll

made its way to the United States and came to

be under the direction of Rabbi Erwin Herman.

“Twenty some years ago, Rabbi Herman took

this Torah to Temple Beth Solomon of the Deaf

in Los Angeles,” Klein said. “As Rabbi Herman

was talking about the Torah, a man from the

congregation stood up in the middle of the

rabbi’s address and began walking toward the

Torah.

“As he approached, in sign language he said

over and over again, ‘That’s my Torah. That’s

my Torah.’ “

That man was Wurmfeld.

Klein encouraged those at the remembrance

service to also learn to follow their faith

through unimaginable journeys from darkness

to light.

“With each journey, like the Yanov Torah, we

acquire new physical and spiritual scars that

we carry with us forever,” he said. “These

scars are the reminders both of our fragile

faith and the need to mend it.”

Klein said experiencing the Yanov Torah

reminds people of the courage, strength and

enduring faith of those who previously took

care of it.

“May their legacy inspire us to journey

inward to discover our own courage, summon

our own strength, and fortify our own faith

and our tradition, which is sewn together

with the threads of beauty and struggle,” he

said. “Through our journeys, through our

brokenness, and through our attempts at

repair, we too will be able to stand up,

carry close our fragile faith and say,

‘That’s my Torah. That’s my Torah.’ “

http://www.standard.net/topics/featured/2010/

04/23/ogden-jewish-congregation-sees-torahl-

poland-survived-wwii-horrors

Photo: OgdenJewish.jpg
Caption: Members of Ogden’s Jewish

congregation view a Torah that survived the

Holocaust. Credit: Ramin Rahimian, Standard-

Examiner

Thanks to Washington Society for Jewish Deaf

(WSJD).

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