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This Torah scroll from a Leipzig synagogue
was saved from destruction on
Kristallnacht. The scroll was found relatively unscathed sixty
years after the widespread Nazi-instigated destruction of synagogues all
over Germany and Austria on the night of November 9, 1938. It was given
to Yad Vashem by the Association of Leipzig Jews in Israel.
The story of the scroll and its rescue
unfolded in stages, beginning with the discovery of the scroll in 1998.
The library at the University of Leipzig, which had been severely
damaged by the WWII Allied bombings, was renovated, exposing Torah
scrolls, in an advanced state of disintegration, together with a number
of rollers that had been hidden between the beams of the library roof.
Circumstances clearly indicated that the scrolls were deliberately
hidden, and therefore this would have had to have been carried out
during the Nazi period. However, not only was there no clue as to who
had been responsible for the concealment, it was also unclear from where
the scrolls had been taken.
The Torah scrolls were in an advanced stage
of decay due to their prolonged stay in damp and humid conditions. The
Association of Leipzig Jews in Israel was informed of the discovery and
requested that in accordance with the Jewish custom of burying holy
books in a Jewish cemetery, that the Torah scrolls be sent to Israel for
burial.
A short time after the story was published
in the Leipzig community bulletin, the Association’s secretariat in Tel
Aviv received a letter from a Canadian citizen, which solved in part the
mystery of the scrolls.
In the letter, Issac Israel explained that
his father, Chaim (who perished in the Holocaust) told him that on the
morning of November 9, 1938, a messenger from the post office came to
advise him that there was a call for him at the telephone exchange. When
he arrived at the exchange, an anonymous caller from Stuttgart advised
the father that violence was planned to take place in every synagogue
throughout Germany. He went to his synagogue, the Broder Schul (on
Kailestrasse) and it was decided to remove a collection of a dozen
scrolls from the synagogue and transfer them to a building belonging to
the JNF, a building defined as the property of British subjects. One
scroll was to remain in the synagogue for prayers.
That very night the pogrom known as
Kristallnacht took place, and the synagogues in the city were
destroyed by fire. The building of the Broder Schul was not destroyed
because the fire was extinguished by a non-Jew who happened to be in the
vicinity (he paid for this by being arrested as an enemy of the Reich).
However, the contents of the synagogue were utterly destroyed and the
scroll that had remained in the ark was torn to shreds.
It is likely that the scrolls discovered in
the renovated university library were those that Chaim Israel had
rescued from the Broder Schul. It is still unclear though: how were the
scrolls transferred from the JNF building to their hiding place in the
university - and who was able and willing, during those dark days in
Germany, to hide Torah scrolls?
The one Torah scroll that had been found in
relatively salvagable condition was sent to the Association of Leipzig
Jews in Israel who subsequently decided that its rightful place is in
Yad Vashem.
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