Exhuming history: censored Jewish text brought to light by Library and Archives Canada - Action News
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Exhuming history: censored Jewish text brought to light by Library and Archives Canada

Once blacked out by a censor's pen, a 16th-century collection of sermons by a rabbi has been restored in its entirety by Library and Archives Canada. The sermons were written at a time when Jews were being forced to convert to Christianity or face expulsion.

'It offers a totally new understanding of the past,' says historian

Censored Jewish text restored

8 years ago
Duration 0:34
Book conservationist Manise Marston describes the procedure of restoring censored passages in the historical text.

Words that were once lost to history have been brought into the light bybook conservationists at Library and Archives Canada.

The 16th-century collection of sermons were by a rabbi and philosopher who sought to keep the faith alive during a darkera of persecution and censorship, when Jews were facing possible expulsion from their homes if they did not convert to Christianity.

A redacted passage from the 16th-century religious text restored by Library and Archives Canada. (Library and Archives Canada)

It took 200 hoursof meticulous restoration at the Library and Archives'Preservation Centre in Gatineauto revealpassages that had been blacked out with iron gall ink.CatholicChurchcensors deemed the words heretical or anti-Christian.

Although the tinge of the dark inkremains on the newly restored pages, it it now possible to read the original Hebrew text.

"It offers a totally new understanding of the past." saidLeah Cohen, curator at Library and Archives Canada of the redacted words.

"If a passage is missing you're not getting the original intent of the authors. And this way you have a way of going back, of digging back, there's kind of anarcheologicalfeel about it."

Marnise Marston, book conservator at Library and Archives Canada, worked for a year on restoring the censored passages in Akedat Yitshak, by Isaac Ben Moses Arama, printed in Venice between 1546 and 1547. (CBC News)

The bigger challenge for the conservatorswas to stop the pages from disintegrating, as the cheaply-made inkused by the censors to cover up the passageswasactually eating away at the paper.

"It was very, very labour intensive," said book conservatorManise Marston."Because it's a 3D object I had to continually move the item so I could treat the areas. Where the ink was corroded the pages were very fragile, very brittle."

The book in question is a collection of sermons byIsaac Ben Arama,arabbi and philosopher who lived in Spain from 1420 to until 1492 until he was expelled from the countryat the beginning of the Spanish Inquisition.

'It offers a totally new understanding of the past,' said librarian and curator Leah Cohen of the Jacob M. Lowy Collection at Library and Archives Canada. (CBC News.)
"Aramahad to deal with the fact that a lot of Jews were forced to hear sermons trying to convert them to persuade them to convert to Christianity so he tried to counter that by delivering sermons that elucidate principals of Judaism." said Leah Cohen.

Thesermons were collected in the bookAkedatYitshak, his best known work.Library and Archives Canada came into possession of the book as bequest from Canadian industrialistJacob M.Lowy, along with his huge collection of antiqueand rare Hebrew religious writings.

Today the pages of those books, including the newly restored tome, are available for scholars and the general public to peruse.