
Philanthropist Hank Sopher, center,
gets ready
to complete the Pentagon
Torah under the direction of scribe
Rabbi Shmuel Wolfman, left, as
Rabbi Sholom Lipskar
supervises. |

Chaplain (Capt) Andrew J. Cohen of
Bolling AFB and Pentagon
Chaplain
(Col) Ralph G. Benson. |

Scribe
Shmuel Wolfman watches as
Rabbi Jacob Z. Goldstein, New York
chaplain of the Secret Service, writes a
letter in the Torah. |

Hank
Sopher watches as the
completed Torah is displayed. |

Displaying the colors at the
festive meal. |
ALEPH INSTITUTE
Torah
Dedicated At
Pentagon Ground Zero
Story and Photos by Tim Boxer
 HE
Pentagon, home of the U.S. military establishment since 1943, last
month became the home of a Sefer Torah (Torah Scroll). "Never
in the history of the Pentagon has this happened," said
Pentagon Chaplain (Capt.) Andrew Cohen who came from nearby
Bolling Air Force Base.
Rabbi Sholom D. Lipskar
of The Shul of Bal Harbor, Fla., and founding chairman of the Aleph
Institute which organized the event, led the dedication of the Torah
in the Pentagon chapel. Aleph is a Lubavitch organization that
serves Jews in the military all over the world.
The Torah was placed in an
ornate Israeli-built Aron Kodesh (holy ark) whose steel cabinet is
secured by a safe lock.
The ark with the holy
scroll rests on the very spot where the terrorists crashed the plane
on 9/11.
"Torah is perceived as
a source of power and strength," Rabbi Lipskar said. "We
bring the Torah to this chapel, a holy place in the Pentagon, itself
a center of power."
Pentagon Chaplain (Col.) Ralph
G. Benson said that in the Pentagon chapel "people of many
faiths practice faith. The idea is that ‘Love thy neighbor as
thyself’ might become a reality."
Dozens of personnel from
all branches of the military watched in fascination as the scribe,
Rabbi Shmuel Wolfman of Jerusalem, touched up the final
letters of the scroll.
"The Torah is the
source of all monotheistic faiths," said Dov Zakheim,
former under secretary of defense and currently vice president of
Booz Allen Hamilton. "That’s where we all began."
Rabbi Jacob Goldstein,
the New York chaplain of the Secret Service, also came to the
celebration. He had returned the day before from hurricane-stricken
New Orleans where he served for three weeks in a tent city at the
airport.
Hank Sopher,
a prominent New York real estate magnate and owner of Quik Park
garages, sponsored the writing of the Pentagon Torah. It takes
almost a year for a scribe to handwrite with a goose quill the
304,805 letters on the parchment scroll.
There is a total of three
Sopher Sefer Torahs. In the past two years Hank Sopher sponsored two
other Torahs, which Rabbi Wolfman also wrote. One was for The Shul
of Bal Harbor, and the other for the Chasam Sopher Synagogue on
Clinton Street on the Lower East Side.
"There is no better
way for Jews to express their gratitude to America," Sopher
said, "than to place a Torah in the Pentagon, which has
preserved our freedom."
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