The
robot's quill runs across the paper scroll, from right to left, scribbling down
ancient Hebrew letters with black ink. It is penning down the Torah, the Jews'
holy scripture, and it is doing it much faster than a rabbi could because it
doesn't need to take breaks. The Torah-writing robot was developed by the
German artists' group robotlab and was presented for the first time Thursday at
Berlin's Jewish Museum. While it takes the machine about three months to
complete the 80-meter (260-foot) -long scroll, a rabbi or a sofer — a Jewish
scribe — needs nearly a year. But unlike the rabbi's work, the robot's Torah
can't be used in a synagogue. "In order for the Torah to be holy, it has
to be written with a goose feather on parchment, the process has to be filled
with meaning and I'm saying prayers while I'm writing it," said Rabbi
Reuven Yaacobov.
See
pictures and read the complete article at -- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/07/10/torah-robot-berlin-jewish-museum_n_5574936.html
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