Page 29 - Holyland Magazine - 2023 Edition
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A layout of the "Song of the Sea"


           miraculous act of redemption. The song is also   Collections, which comes from Germany and   the Israelites walking on dry land with the sea
           treated specially in the text of the Torah.  dates to around 1250.     on both sides.

           While most of the Torah is written in solid                            These scrolls, or others with the same features,
           lines, with occasional paragraph breaks, the   In the medieval tradition of central Europe, the   are on display in the permanent exhibit “The
           “Song of the Sea'' has a special layout. In the   last two lines of the song were not written in   History of the Bible” at the Museum of the
           Babylonian Talmud (Tractate Megillah 16b),   the “brick by brick” style. In line with medieval   Bible  in  Washington,  DC.  Though  few  non-
           Rabbi She’eila of Kefar Timrata is quoted as   tradition in central Europe—but it has been   Jews know about the seventh day of Passover
           saying: “All of the passages of biblical song   corrected to the “brick by brick” layout. This is   and its focus on the splitting of the sea, the
           are written as half bricks arranged upon whole   evidence that the community using the scroll   significance  of  this  event  and  the  song  that
           bricks and whole bricks arranged around half   decided the older layout was incorrect, and so   commemorates it can be seen in the historical
           bricks.”                           they “fixed” it.                    focus on the layout of the text of the song itself.

           This special layout, unique in the Torah,   In addition, the most common version of the   First, the development of the “brick by brick”
           though with a parallel in the “Song of Devorah”   layout contains a visual pun to represent the   style  to  denote  the  text  as  a  special  song,
           (Deborah in English translation)in Judges 5,   physical moment of redemption. The last   and then the change to the text’s final line to
           requires the exact content of each line to be   line of the song is broken into three sections   illustrate the miracle told in the song’s lyrics.
           specifically prescribed to maintain its uniformity.   of text: the “waters of the sea,” the dry land   It reminds us that even as the biblical text
           However, different communities have created   the Israelites walked on within, and “the sea”   remains constant, the ways we engage with it
           slightly different layouts.        again. The layout of the text thus represents   change over time and place.

           The Dead Sea Scrolls do not contain the
           “brick by brick” layout of the song, for
           example, though the oldest known Torah scroll
           fragments do. We can see evidence of this
           evolution in one of the scrolls in the Museum   The last line of the "Song of the Sea" in SCR.001646

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