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Neighbor News

250-year-old Torah Donated to the Congregation at NewBridge in Dedham

Self-proclaimed "Torah Sisters," three artists bonded as they designed and created a cover to accompany the Torah

Self-proclaimed "Torah Sisters" Sheila Pallay (left), Judith Weinberg and Marlene Yesley bonded over creating a new Torah cover for a 250-year-old Czech Torah that Pallay donated to the Congregation at NewBridge on the Charles.
Self-proclaimed "Torah Sisters" Sheila Pallay (left), Judith Weinberg and Marlene Yesley bonded over creating a new Torah cover for a 250-year-old Czech Torah that Pallay donated to the Congregation at NewBridge on the Charles. (Courtesy: Marc Weinberg for Hebrew SeniorLife)

Earlier this month, the Congregation at NewBridge on the Charles welcomed a new Torah as part of the observance of the Jewish holiday of Shavout, which celebrates the giving of the 10 Commandments and the Torah on Mount Sinai.

The 250-year-old Torah scroll, which had been in use in a synagogue in the Czech Republic and was hidden during the Holocaust, has been restored. It was a gift from Sheila Pallay, a photographer originally from Sharon, and her husband Herb, in honor of her upcoming 80th birthday.

Pallay, along with Judith Weinberg, a retired special ed teacher from Needham now a
quilter and fabric artist, and Marlene Yesley, a retired teacher from Newton
now a painter and designer, got together to design as create the new Torah
cover, which coordinates with the fabric used in congregation’s ark.

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The three artists all met at NewBridge on the Charles, a senior living community in
Dedham that’s run by Hebrew SeniorLife, where Pallay and Weinberg and their
husbands moved to in September and December 2021, respectively, and where
Yesley has lived in since 2018. The process of working closely on all the
details and logistics of bringing the new Torah to NewBridge and designing the
Torah cover, which is traditional for Torahs, led Rabbi Judi Ehrlich to dub
them the “Torah Sisters.”

According to Yesley, she had long wanted to create a work of religious art but hadn’t
found an appropriate opportunity. The same was true of Weinberg. They consulted
with Beverly Sky, a Boston-based artist and weaver who was born in a displaced
person’s camp after World War II, because Sky had designed “the Ark” that holds
the congregation’s other Torah. With a color scheme using fall colors, and an
inscription in Hebrew quoting a Jewish prayer, “from generation to generation,”
the cover honors this scroll’s 250 years, originally from a synagogue from
Přeštice -- coincidentally, a Czech city that Pallay had visited and
photographed.

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Before the pandemic, Pallay spent more than three months photographing what remained
of the Jewish community in the Czech Republic, eventually publishing a book, “Light
Beyond the Shadows: The Legacy of the Czech Torah Scrolls and the Renewal of
Jewish Life in Czechia.” She followed that up by photographing Rabbi Kevin
Hale, a scribe in Northampton, MA, as he restored a Czech Torah, one of 1,564
sacred scrolls that had survived the Holocaust and in 1964 were sent to London
where the ones in good shape were distributed to synagogues around the world.
So when Pallay’s husband, Herb, asked how she’d like to celebrate her 80th
birthday, she asked to present a Czech Torah to the Congregation at NewBridge,
as a way to bring new life to a Torah scroll.

The experience inspired the “Torah Sisters” in unexpected ways.

“From the moment, I saw a quilted Torah cover, I knew I wanted to make one but never
thought I’d have the opportunity,” Weinberg said. “It’s one of the most
profound experiences in my life to part of this effort.”

“The entire experience was very spiritual for me,” Pallay said. “It really started
when I was doing a portfolio project in photography at RISD and took photos of
Rabbi Hale as he restored another Czech Torah, which led my husband and me to
want to photograph what remains of Jewish culture in the Czech Republic, and
led me to Přeštice, the city where this Torah was first used. This has been an
incredible experience.”

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