Detectives are appealing for information and witnesses after two Torah scrolls were stolen from a house in Barnet, leaving a Jewish community ‘in mourning’.
The burglary took place at around 17:30hrs on Wednesday, 22 March, at a residential address in Ashbourne Grove, NW7.
The suspect was disturbed inside the property, and he made off. He is described as a white man, around 5ft 10ins in height and dressed in black with a scarf across his face.
The burglar made off with a safe containing two Torah scrolls, each worth around £20,000 and moreover of incalculable spiritual value.
Like all Torah scrolls, they contain hand-written Hebrew text. One of the scrolls is around 24 inches tall, the other around 18 inches, and both have distinctive decorative handles. Only the smaller scroll was with its silver breastplate.
The victims, Rabbi Larry Tabick and Rabbi Dr Jackie Tabick, said: “It was a great shock to find that our home had been ransacked and an even greater shock for our lodger who came face to face with a masked intruder. Finding an unauthorised stranger in your private space is always shocking.
“As we surveyed the damage, we were at first relieved that little of our property seemed to have been taken: some spare foreign currency, some costume jewellery of only sentimental value. Then we noticed that a metal cabinet was missing. It contained two Torah scrolls – scrolls of the first five books of the Bible – belonging to Shir Hayim, the Hampstead Reform Jewish Community, which it is Larry’s honour to serve. It was gone, ripped from the wall.
“Torah scrolls are always hand-written on parchment in Hebrew by trained scribes. Ours had wooden handles at both ends to facilitate rolling to the place where the required reading is. Both had velvet mantles, one blue, one red, with gold-embroidered Hebrew words, and trimmed with gold braid. That fact that scrolls are hand-written in itself means that they are expensive to replace.
“But this is not an issue of cost. Their real value is symbolic, and deeply spiritual. Every religious Jew, no matter their persuasion, reveres the Torah scrolls and the words and teachings they contain. Every religious Jewish community reads from scrolls like these every Sabbath and on all Jewish festivals. In fact, the Torah reading forms the heart of these services. A community that has lost its Torah scrolls has lost its heart, and it is a cause for mourning, almost as if a much-loved relative and friend had died. The Hampstead Reform Jewish Community is mourning with us.
“Of course, the scrolls can be replaced, but we have come to love them. They were deliberately small so almost any of our members could carry them on procession, and nearly all of us have done so over the years. Many families have celebrated the coming of age of their children, their forthcoming weddings, and other occasions, and commemorated their departed loved ones by reading from these very scrolls. Some have donated towards their purchase and upkeep. With their disappearance, part of our history has been lost.”
Anyone with information about the burglary, or who may have seen or been offered the two scrolls for sale, is asked to contact Barnet CID on 020 8733 4439.
Alternatively, contact police via 101 or via Twitter @MetCC.
To give information anonymously call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 or visit the crimestoppers-uk.org web site.