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Sefer Torah is compared to
a Tree of Life not only because of the equity between
Learning of the Torah and Life of a Jew. Anything artificial
would be poisonous to the nature and even more so to the
Sefer Torah. Being a source of life, Torah does not tolerate
any unnatural rationale. |
| It is true in case of the
substances of Sefer Torah too. It can not be printed on
a paper, xeroxed or artificially multiplied. By the same
token its ingredients - eriot (folios), gidim (threads),
dio (ink) and kulmus (quill) are made of natural things
and possess natural characteristics. Thus while making
a Sefer Torah we are reminded that animals and minerals
can have a holy purpose. Writing Torah scroll is a delicate
and sophisticated matter that implies much more that the
writing skills themselves. A sofer is required to be an
expert in a number of contingent fields. He has to know,
for instance, the qualities and differences of a variety
of types of parchment. Parchment can be made of the specially
prepared skin of a kosher animal - goat, bull /cow, or
deer. The skin of an animal has to be soaked in limewater
for nine days. When it is a hairless surface, the sofer
stretches it on a drying frame. He scrapes the skin until
it is dry. Than he sands it until it becomes a flat, smooth
sheet fit for writing. |
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Each of different types of
parchment has specific
characteristics that fit certain kind of ink (dio). Finally,
the sofer applies a straight edge to draw a writing pattern
- usually forty two horizontal lines across the parchment
and two ertical lines defining the boundaries for each
column. He also leaves a blank space between the area
designed for writing and the margin - according to the
tradition, it has to be five fingers wide. |
Thus, a sofer will have at least three-four
columns on each piece of the parchment - called amudim (from
amud, a column). In general, there should be no less than
three amudim on one eriah and not more than eight. Now the
parchment is waiting for the writing process to start.
Secrets of the preparation of the ink (dio) usually go by
word of mouth from generation to generation. Only the obvious,
well known and easy-to found part of the manual production
of ink is disclosed. Quality of ink is directly proportional
to the longevity of the text written on the parchment. A nicely
prepared mixture of certain chemical elements may result in
additional fifty- hundred years of the active usage of the
Sefer Torah. Ink has to be always fresh - therefore a small
portion is prepared, needed for half-a-day work - and hand-made.
It is usually made of a blend of gallnuts, copper sulfate
crystals, Arabic gum and water. In order to make the quill
running smoothly the parchment may be covered either by a
special substance (ointment), called mashichah, that makes
it surface glittering white, or by a special chalk-based substance
(kelach). Mashichah is applied to both sides of the parchment
to make it look nicer. There is a well-known makhloket (polemics)
whether the mashichah should be perceived as an additional
layer on which the letters are written; in that case the Sefer
Torah should be viewed as problematic since its letters were
not written on the parchment itself but rather on the additional
layer. Most of the Rabbis, however, do not support this viewpoint
because the meshichah is never considered a separate entity,
rather it is additional embellishment for the whole process
of writing. Since the skin of the animal has darker and lighter
stains, sometimes the sofer applies kelach (chalk) to the
parchment in order to make it color homogeneously white. However,
today most of Sefardi congregations as well as Litvaks prefer
Sifrei Torah written on a parchment which is either not mashuach,
or mashuach only on the backside. Parchment with kelach surface
is desirable worldwide. When the sofer finishes writing the
text on the first square piece of the parchment, he sews (makes
tefirah) to it an identical square piece that resemble the
pages of the book. Those pieces of the parchment used for
the Sefer Torah are called eriot (eriah - folio). They are
connected by means of a needle and giddin - specially processed
ox, cow's, or sheep's leg sinews - used as a thread. A sofer
makes a stitch on every six line of each of the sewed eriot.
Finally, the main tool of a sofer - his ink quill. According
to the law of sofrim, either a goose or a turkey feather,
laboriously sharpened to facilitate a special angle convenient
to the Sofer's handwriting writes the text of the Sefer Torah.
A scribe writes with the stem of the quill, not the barbs.
A scribe may need two-four quills for the whole Sefer Torah.
However, it may take him a day or two to ensure a correct
sharpness of the quill. The better the angle is measured the
nicer will be shaped the letters and consequently the better
will be the quality of a script.
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