What is soferut, and is the atelier a real soferut workshop?
Soferut is the Hebrew tradition of writing sacred texts by hand, on parchment, with a quill and ink prepared in the workshop. The work covers the Sefer Torah, the mezuzah, tefillin, the ketubah, and other Hebrew calligraphy that a household, a congregation, or a study hall asks for. The atelier has done this work in the Old City of Jerusalem since 1946, alongside the smaller iconography practice that the parish communities of the Old City bring it.
How long does a Sefer Torah take?
A complete Sefer Torah, written by a single sofer, takes between twelve and eighteen months. The work cannot be rushed. A patron who needs a scroll for a stated date, such as a synagogue dedication or a bar mitzvah, must commission it well in advance and confirm the date in the acceptance letter; otherwise the order is taken in turn.
Are tefillin written for left-handed clients?
Yes. The atelier asks the patron at the time of inquiry whether the tefillin are for a right-handed or a left-handed wearer, and writes accordingly. The two are not interchangeable; the convention is observed strictly.