The Torah Song
by "Journeys"
sung in Shabbos House
on Simchas Torah & by our
new-old Torah dedication.
I was made back in
1842,
by a humble man, a real G-d-fearing Jew.
Who did his work with honesty,
with feeling and with pride.
He was known in Kiev as Yankele the Scribe.
With loving care
his hands so sure and still,
he formed me with some parchment, ink and quill.
Each day he'd slowly add to me, just a few more lines,
with words to last until the end of time.
And on the day that
I was finally complete,
the whole town came, and filled the narrow street.
They sang and danced, and held me high,
as they carried me away,
to the little wooden shul where I would stay.
And as the Rabbi
held me close against his chest,
he said out loud and clear to all the rest.
He said, "no matter if you're very young or even if you're old -
live by the words you'll find inside this scroll".
Three days a week,
they read from me out loud.
It filled my soul with joy, it made me proud.
They'd follow each and every word, with fire in their eyes,
the words that told them how to live their lives.
I watched the
generations come and go.
I saw the old men die, their children grow.
But never in a century did I miss my turn once,
for the fathers, they had left me with their sons.
But the hatred from
the West came to Kiev,
and they rounded up the Jews who had not fled.
But Moishele the Shamash, he was brave and he was bold,
he hid me in a cellar, dark and cold.
And for years and
years, I waited all alone,
for the people of my town to take me home.
And they'd sing and dance and hold me high,
as they carried me away,
to my little wooden shul where I would stay.
But it was someone
else who found my hiding place.
And to America he sent me in a crate.
The men who took me off the boat, they said I was a prize.
But they were Jews I did not recognize.
In a case of glass,
they put me on display,
where visitors would look at me and say,
"How very nice and beautiful, a stunning work of art"
but they knew not, what was inside my heart.
Across the room, I
saw upon a shelf,
old friends of mine who lived back in Kiev.
A silver pair of candle-sticks, a menorah made of brass,
we'd all become more echoes of the past.
So if you hear my
voice, why don't you come along,
and take me to the place where I belong.
And maybe even sing and dance, as you carry me away,
to some little wooden shul where I could stay.
And let the Rabbi
hold me close against his chest,
he'll speak out loud and clear to all the rest,
He'll say: "No matter if you're young, or even if you're old,
live by the words you'll find inside this scroll"
"Live by the words, you'll find inside my Soul".
"And they sang and danced