Las Vegas Review-Journal

Rare Torah scrolls not in Brazil fire

As much as 90 percent of artifacts feared lost

- By Peter Prengaman and Marcelo Silva de Sousa

RIO DE JANEIRO — Brazil’s National Museum said Wednesday that centuries-old Torah scrolls, considered to be some of Judaism’s oldest documents, had been moved before a massive fire ravaged the place and gutted much of the largest collection­s of national history artifacts in Latin America.

Questions about the fate of the scrolls had swirled since Sunday night’s blaze at the museum, which used to be the home of Brazil’s royal family.

Amid an ongoing investigat­ion and unable to access much of the now destroyed museum, officials have been reluctant to give any account of how specific artifacts fared in the fire or disclose informatio­n on other material that may have been in other locations.

“The Torah is being kept in a safe place,” according to a museum statement sent to The Associated Press on Wednesday, adding it had been removed nearly two years ago. The statement did not say where it had been transferre­d.

A spokesman at the Israeli Embassy in the capital Brasilia said it didn’t have more informatio­n on the Torah, Judaism’s holy book.

Brazilian scholars have said the scrolls originated in Yemen and pos- sibly date back to the 13th century.

The museum’s website says the nine scrolls, written in Hebrew, were acquired in the early 19th century by the country’s last monarch, Dom Pedro II. The website, which had apparently not been updated, also said the scrolls were not part of an exhibit, but rather kept in a safe in the director’s office.

The good news came as museum officials said they feared as much as 90 percent of Latin America’s largest collection of treasures might have been lost in the fire. Aerial photos of the main building showed only heaps of rubble and ashes in the parts of the building where the roof collapsed.

Firefighte­rs on Tuesday “found fragments of bones in a room where the museum kept many items, including skulls,” said Cristiana Serejo, the museum’s deputy director. “We still have to collect them and take them to the lab to know exactly what they are.”

 ?? Silvia Izquierdo ?? The Associated Press The sky can be seen through the windows of Brazil’s National Museum on Wednesday after a fire tore through it in Rio de Janeiro.
Silvia Izquierdo The Associated Press The sky can be seen through the windows of Brazil’s National Museum on Wednesday after a fire tore through it in Rio de Janeiro.

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