Resources
The Memorial Scrolls Trust holds a significant archive of materials relating to the Czech Torah scrolls; their history, care, and continued use. This page brings together documents, research and practical resources for communities, scholars and anyone with a connection to the scrolls.
Authorised Soferim
Our current list of our authorised sofrim is as follows:
-
UK
- Sofer Mordechai Pinchas
London
mpm68@cantab.ac.uk - Soferet Avielah Barclay
London
soferet.avielah@gmail.com - Sofer Chaim Moscovitch
Sunderland
chaimmosco49@gmail.com - Rabbi Yehuda Benchemhoun
London
rabbibenchemhoun@gmail.com
-
USA
- Rabbi Kevin Hale
Leeds MA
soferhale@gmail.com - Sofer Neil Yerman
NY
neil@neilyerman.com - Sofer Alberto Attia
San Diego CA
ronniesieger@gmail.com - Sofer Ron Sieger
Los Angeles CA - Sofer on Site (team)
Miami FL
info@soferonsite.com - Soferet Alexandra Casser
Fairfax VA
alex@stamscribes.com - Rabbi David Rue
Oakland CA USA
davidrue@yahoo.com
-
Australia and Israel
- Rabbi Eli Gutnick
Melbourne
melbournesofer@gmail.com - Sofer Jamie Shear
Jerusalem
jshear@ktavtam.com
Jewish Museum in Prague
Founded in 1906, the Jewish Museum in Prague is the third oldest of its kind in the world, and is a remarkable ensemble of historic synagogues, monuments, and exhibitions located in the former Jewish Quarter, Josefov, in Prague’s Old Town. It includes some of the most iconic sites of Jewish history and culture offering a profound connection to centuries of Jewish life, resilience, and tradition.
The MST’s 1564 Czech scrolls were part of a treasure of over 200,000 Jewish artifacts collected from 118 Towns across Bohemia and Moravia and shipped to Prague during the Shoah. In 1950 the Jewish Community ceded the museum to the State. Uninterested in religious items, the scrolls were moved to a warehouse, the former Michle synagogue.
In 1963 Eric Estorick an art dealer, interested in a Torah for his father, was taken to the Michle and offered all the scrolls. He contacted a client, Ralph Yablon z”l, who agreed to purchase them all and donated them to the Westminster Synagogue.
Westminster Synagogue
The congregation was founded in 1957 by Rabbi Harold Reinhart z”l and Kent House, their home, was aquired in 1960. An independent community it is largely in tune with the progressive movements in the United Kingdom.
The Synagogue has been closely involved in the Memorial Scrolls Trust which they established as an independent charity to take responsibility for the care and allocation of the Czech scrolls. The MST museum is on the 3rd floor of Kent House, the home of the Westminster Synagogue.