The Jerusalem Post

A rabbi was having trouble with his vision, so he created a Braille Sefer Torah

- • By JOSHUA AXELROD (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS)

PITTSBURGH – Rabbi Lenny Sarko had a problem that was threatenin­g to derail his career.

After spending years as an environmen­tal scientist creating recycling systems for corporatio­ns nationwide, Sarko realized he was done with all the travel and decided to pursue a job related to his one true passion: Judaism.

That was 15 years ago, and since then, he has been embedded with synagogues in Indiana; Tampa, Florida; and Columbus, Ohio; before landing at Congregati­on Emanu-El Israel in Greensburg, Pennsylvan­ia, where has been for the last two years.

Before moving to the Pittsburgh area, though, Sarko suffered from a serious health scare. About five years ago, he experience­d bleeding in his eyes as a result of Type 2 diabetes that left him with about 80% of his left eye’s vision but only 10% to 15% in his right eye. He can still mostly read, and his eyesight has not deteriorat­ed further, but the damage was also irreparabl­e, and there are certain things he just cannot do anymore, such as driving at night.

“I kind of have a foot in both worlds – both those who struggle with vision issues and the sighted,” Sarko told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “Being that and a rabbi, it put me in a rather different position than most people might ever find themselves in... Not being able to read was a potential horror story.”

“As a rabbi, not to be able to have access to books was very scary to me,” he said. “That started me to say, ‘OK, as a Jew, you find solutions.’ The first solution was to learn English Braille. After that,

you start asking other questions like, ‘If there’s English Braille, is there Hebrew Braille?’ Yes... Then, I asked the question: ‘Is there such a thing as a Braille Sefer Torah?’”

A Sefer Torah is subject to strict rules regarding its production and how it is to be read. After being unable to locate a Braille Sefer Torah currently in existence, Sarko decided to take matters into his own hands and, after almost three years, created what may be the world’s first Braille Sefer Torah.

It was a fairly herculean undertakin­g, as standard Torahs generally cost about $25,000 and take about a year for a scribe to complete, Sarko said. His special Torah took so long to make because he spent an extra year developing a mistake-free process to manually poke Braille holes onto a scroll.

Generally, scribes have to start over after committing even the smallest blunder, which meant he had to effectivel­y eliminate any potential margins of error.

Now that he has perfected the process, Sarko said, “My plates can be used to make hundreds and thousands of Torahs” going forward. He said he could probably make a Braille Torah in four or five months by himself and one or two months if he has help.

Because Braille is not a language but rather a way to represent speech in a different way, Sarko’s Torah is just Hebrew in Braille as opposed to a transliter­ation. Torahs are supposed to be read and not memorized, which a Braille Torah makes possible for blind and visually impaired Jews. A Braille Torah must be touched while reading it, which technicall­y is not allowed according to Halacha.

Sarko is not worried about that, though.

“In one respect, you’re telling a blind or visually impaired person they’re a full member of the community,” he said. “Then you’re turning around and telling them they can’t do this. To me, that’s an important part, and I started to ask questions... Judaism across its millennia has always adjusted to context. How do we do a mitzvah in this situation?”

Mitzvah is exactly how Erika Petach would describe what Sarko has accomplish­ed. As the president of Blind and Vision Rehabilita­tion Services of Pittsburgh, a nonprofit that helps folks in those categories reach their highest levels of independen­ce, she loves the concept of a Braille Torah and how it will impact the local Jewish community.

“I think it’s awesome,” she said. “Our goal at BVRS is 100% inclusivit­y for everyone we serve. This is a way that this individual is making the reading of the Torah 100% inclusive.”

BVRS offers a variety of free programs to the blind and visually impaired, including profession­al assistance, residentia­l services, access to technology lessons, personal adjustment to blindness training and low-vision rehabilita­tion. It also frequently aids its more religious members via volunteers who help them get to and from houses of worship, said Petach, who has been with BVRS for 11 years.

She said certain technologi­cal advances, such as 3D printing, have “opened up a lot of opportunit­ies to provide things in tactile formats” for the population she serves. What is possibly even more valuable, though, is making sure the blind and visually impaired know about innovation­s such as Sarko’s Braille Torah.

“The more people hear these stories about what there is for people who are blind or the capabiliti­es of people who are blind, that starts to knock down barriers,” Petach said.

As for Sarko, he wants to begin stockpilin­g Braille Sefer Torahs and lending them out to congregati­ons and individual­s across the country for specific occasions. He is attempting to fund this endeavor with grants he has applied for through the Devarim Institute, his Jewish education nonprofit.

There are more than 300,000 blind or visually impaired Jews in the US, Sarko estimated. He invites any of them in Western Pennsylvan­ia to visit Emanu-El Israel and check out his invention for themselves.

“Come read the Torah!” Sarko said. “Do it! This is a wonderful mitzvah. There’s nothing more thrilling... It’s so meaningful for them. I can’t think of a nicer gift to give to people.”

 ??  ?? RABBI LENNY SARKO holds a Braille Sefer Torah earlier this month at Congregati­on Emanu-El Israel in Greensburg, Pennsylvan­ia. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS)
RABBI LENNY SARKO holds a Braille Sefer Torah earlier this month at Congregati­on Emanu-El Israel in Greensburg, Pennsylvan­ia. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/TNS)

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