Jerusalem – Scholars Hunt Missing Pages of Ancient Hebrew Torah, The Crown of Aleppo

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    A page from the Aleppo CodexJerusalem – A quest is under way on four continents to find the missing pages of one of the world’s most important holy texts, the 1,000-year-old Hebrew Bible known as the Crown of Aleppo. Hebrew: כֶּתֶר אֲרָם צוֹבָא

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    Crusaders held it for ransom, fire almost destroyed it and it was reputedly smuggled across Mideast borders hidden in a washing machine. But in 1958, when it finally reached Israel, 196 pages were missing – about 40 percent of the total – and for some Old Testament scholars they have become a kind of holy grail.

    Researchers representing the manuscript’s custodian in Jerusalem now say they have leads on some of the missing pages and are nearer their goal of making the manuscript whole again.

    The Crown, known in English as the Aleppo Codex, may not be as famous as the Dead Sea Scrolls. But to many scholars it is even more important, because it is considered the definitive edition of the Bible for Jewry worldwide.

    The key to finding the pages is thought to lie with the insular diaspora of Jews originating in Aleppo, Syria, where the manuscript resided in a synagogue’s iron chest for centuries.

    A turning point in its history came three days after the U.N. passed the 1947 resolution to grant Israel statehood, provoking a Syrian mob to burn down the synagogue. Aleppo’s Jews rescued the Codex, but in the ensuing years the 10,000-strong community was uprooted and scattered around the world.

    Scholars believe that Aleppo Jews still hold many of the missing pages, while others have fallen into the hands of antiquities dealers. Two fragments have already surfaced: a full page in 1982, and a smaller piece last year that had been carried for decades by a Brooklyn man, Sam Sabbagh, as a good-luck charm. Persistent rumors tell of more waiting to be found.

    When the Codex reached Israel 50 years ago it was presented to Izhak Ben-Zvi, the country’s president and a scholar of Jewish communities in the Islamic world. Although the manuscript is housed at the Israel Museum with the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Ben-Zvi Institute founded by the late president remains its legal custodian and is behind the new search.

    Past efforts, including some by Israeli diplomats and Mossad secret service agents, came up against a wall of silence in the Aleppo community. The new search has recruited a small group of Aleppo Jews, better able to win the community’s trust, and has yielded information on the whereabouts of specific pieces and on the people who are holding them, said Zvi Zameret, the Ben-Zvi Institute’s director.

    “Only someone who believes that this manuscript is one of the foundation stones of the people of Israel, someone whose goal is not to get rich – only such a person can make progress,” he said.

    He divulged few details lest he compromise the effort. He would say only that the search is being carried out in North, South and Central America, Israel and England, and that success appeared within reach.

    “If there is a possibility, as the rumors say, that there are not only small fragments but also entire sections, that is extremely exciting,” said Adolfo Roitman, the Israel Museum curator in charge of the manuscript. “We’re missing entire books – most of the five Books of Moses, except for a few pages, and we have no Book of Esther, no Book of Daniel.”

    He, like most other scholars involved, has met people who know of people who supposedly have pages. But the leads invariably end with people who refuse to talk.

    Each page is priceless, but money wouldn’t be an issue for most Aleppo Jews because anyone trafficking in such holy relics could be banished by the community, Roitman said. Some of the Crown’s pages bear an inscription warning that it “may not be sold.”
    Two consecutive pages of the Aleppo Codex from the now-missing part of Deuteronomy were photographed in 1910 by Joseph Segall, containing the Ten Commandments. The image shows Deuteronomy 4:38 (גדלים) to 6:3 (ואשר), including the following parashah breaks: {P} 4:41 אז יבדיל {P} 5:1 ויקרא משה {S} 5:6 אנכי {S} 5:10 לא תשא {S} 5:11 שמור {S} 5:15 כבד {S} 5:16a לא תרצח {S} 5:16b ולא תנאף {S} 5:16c ולא תגנב {S} 5:16d ולא תענה {S} 5:17a ולא תחמד {S} 5:21b ולא תתאוה {S} את הדברים 5:22. These parashot are shown in bold within the list below for Parashat Va\'etchannan
    Some people might be superstitious about the fragments they hold, or believe they are rightfully the property of Aleppo Jews, not of scholars. Others might simply have no idea of the value of what they own.

    The Codex, on 491 parchment pages about 12 inches by 10 inches, was transcribed sometime around 930 A.D. by Shlomo Ben Boya’a, a scribe in Tiberias on the banks of the Sea of Galilee. It was edited by a renowned scholar of the time, Aaron Ben-Asher. Its completion marked the end of a centuries-long process that created the final text of the Hebrew Bible.

    It belonged to a Jewish community in Jerusalem until it was seized by the Crusaders who captured and sacked the city in 1099. Ransomed, it made its way to Cairo, where it was used by the 12th-century Jewish philosopher Maimonides, who declared it the most accurate copy of the Old Testament.

    The manuscript doesn’t contain passages missing from other versions. Instead, its accuracy is a matter of details like vowel signs and single letters that would only slightly alter pronunciation. But Judaism sanctifies each tiny calligraphic flourish in the Bible as a way of ensuring that communities around the world use precisely the same version of the divine book. That’s why the Codex is considered by some to be the most important Jewish text in existence, and why the missing pieces are so coveted.

    “The bottom line is that the whole process of putting together the text of the Bible ended with the Codex,” said Rafael Zer of the Hebrew University Bible Project in Jerusalem, which is using the Codex to create what is meant to be the authoritative text of the Old Testament but can’t properly complete it without the missing pages.

    Not enough has been done to find them, laments Hayim Tawil of New York’s Yeshiva University, the author of a forthcoming book on the Crown. “For Jews and for Western civilization this manuscript is equivalent to the Magna Carta,” he said.

    How the Codex reached Aleppo in northern Syria is unclear. Some scholars believe it was brought by a descendant of Maimonides in the late 1300s.

    There it was guarded as the Jews’ most prized possession and talisman. But on Dec. 2, 1947, the mob burned the synagogue. In the ensuing years, Aleppo Jews would describe rushing to snatch pages from the flames. The missing ones have not been seen since, with two exceptions.

    One page from the Book of Chronicles survived in the New York apartment of an Aleppo woman and was handed over by her relatives in 1982. Another fragment recounting the Exodus story of the 10 plagues survived in the wallet of Sabbagh, another Aleppo exile in New York, who laminated it and kept it as a good luck charm. Last year, following Sabbagh’s death, his family brought the fragment to join the rest of the manuscript in Jerusalem.

    One of the men who rescued pages from the synagogue was Mourad Faham, who sneaked into the building disguised as a Bedouin and found the bulk of the manuscript on the floor, according to his grandson, Jack Dweck.

    A decade later he strapped the manuscript under his robe and crossed the border into Turkey, Dweck said. From there it was wrapped in towels and, according to most versions of the story, bundled into a washing machine to be shipped to Israel.

    Dweck, a businessman who lives in New York, home to one of the biggest communities of Aleppo Jews, says he has heard the rumors among his fellow Jews and believes the missing parts exist.

    “My guess is that there’s a bigger piece somewhere else, waiting to be found,” he said.


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    17 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Question and point to ponder: When the enitre codex is assembled and we find inconsistencies with the Torah we use today _ do we make changes? or do we have a further split between Jews?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    This has no business being held by a secular museum in the secular state where it can be used by those who want to disprove the validity of the Torah chas vesholom. It should be in the possession of bnei Torah of Aleppo origin (but as a full document, not with bits and pieces in the hands of individuals).

    Toras emes
    Toras emes
    15 years ago

    This edition of the Chumash has zero significance for us as did the dead sea scrolls. We know that the Torah that we have is genuine and unchanged and don’t need proofs from some obscure find of a Chumash.

    Besides the fact that all faithful Jews read from the Torah weekly and there is probably no sefer in the world that is repeatedly reviewed and scrutinized, there are various mechanisms to insure integrity.

    This whole hullabaloo is a product of those that have no connection to true Judaism and no knowledge of the absolute veracity of our mesorah.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    We are missing a Hebrew Publishing Company Chumash from our bays medresh. Maybe we should look for that one?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    Still, this is a proud part of the heritage of the Jews of Aram Soba and belongs in the hands of the community, NOT in the hands of the medine shel gehennom. And if it was indeed used by the Rambam, then it has significance to all bnei Torah.

    Belongs 2 Torah Jews
    Belongs 2 Torah Jews
    15 years ago

    “Some people might be superstitious about the fragments they hold, or believe they are rightfully the property of Aleppo Jews, not of scholars.”
    It is the rightful property of the Aleppo Jews and ALL JEWS, Not the world!!! In fact Chazzal say that when goyim read/possess Torah it is as though they are stealing… Several verses in Torah state clearly it is ISRAELS INHERITANCE!!! It is Klal Israel’s and no one else, especially not secular zionist scholars, half of whom dont even believe in Hashem. If there is anyone who reads this article and possess even a fragment of the Aleppo Torah NEVER EVER give it to scholars or goyim!!!

    COMMON SENSE
    COMMON SENSE
    15 years ago

    Some of the comments here indicate that the people writing have no idea what the Aleppo Codex is. It is sad that people form opinions without knowing the facts. The Aleppo Codex was used by the Rambam, who held that this was the most accuate Mesora we have of the Torah.. Therefore, suggestions that this is a secular work is absurd. The question as to whether we would change the Torah if the Codex showed something different also shows ignorance. The Torah that is used throughout the world by all Jewish communities in all countries and in all four corners of the world is identical. The Codex is no different. The significance of trhe Codex is not the wording, but of “Trup”, markings on top of the letters in the Torah and perhaps slightly different spellings. The Rambam had the entire Codex and held that it was absolutely accurate. If all the poages are found, it will simply conform to what the Rambam knew and held to be true, but could not possibly change the Torah, since the Rambam would not have approved of such a work.

    Please, people, before commenting on something, please ascertain the facts.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    15 years ago

    LOL, checking facts? Knowledge of what you are talking about? shooting from the hip. “Common Sense” cut them some slack they are Frum.

    Yonatan from Safad
    Yonatan from Safad
    15 years ago

    You know what I realize by reading the negative posts here? That some people are threatened by everything! You are frum, but you feel a need to strike out against this sefer, which you don’t understand, the people who read it, as if they are attacking you and your way of life. That is called fear and paranoia. There is too much of this in the frum world.

    Aron
    Aron
    15 years ago

    The Rambam was able to vouch for the authenticty and veracity of the Codex based on the unbroken chain of ownership up until that time.
    Even if all the missing sections are found, do we have someone of the Rambam’s stature that can do the same today? It has been held by many unknown hands for many decades. And what of the many centuries that passed since the passing of the Rambam? Who can vouch for the authenticty?
    I doubt if many are willing to rely on “carbon dating” or whatever method used by “scholars” of dubious backgrounds.