On a cold Sunday evening in February, a lively procession wound its way through the streets of St. Paul. Beginning at Portland and Pascal avenues, members of 日韩精品鈥檚 Jewish community carried a Torah scroll toward campus, tracing a path through the neighborhood that it had lived in decades before.
Dance and song broke out on campus as the procession reached its destination鈥擶eyerhaeuser Memorial Chapel. For the participants, there was much to celebrate: for the first time, Macalester鈥檚 Jewish community would have a Torah of its own.
鈥淚 just love dancing with Torah,鈥 said Macalester Rabbi Emma Kippley-Ogman, who has served as the college鈥檚 Jewish and interfaith chaplain for nearly a decade. 鈥淚n that circle, with people of all ages, it鈥檚 not about how fast you can go, it鈥檚 not about how fancy your footsteps are, it鈥檚 about actually joining your heart with the person next to you to music, moving in space.鈥

That distinct spirit of togetherness could be felt throughout the Hachnashat Sefer Torah鈥攁 scroll welcoming celebration鈥攐n February 22, 2026. And it was felt across the generations as Macalester alums and friends of all ages returned to campus to dance, chant, and celebrate alongside current students, staff, and faculty.

Peggy Davis 鈥72, who helped found the original Hebrew House on campus, shared her hope with attendees that the Torah will serve as a living symbol of the same sense of community and togetherness she and her peers worked to build more than fifty years ago.
鈥淚 hope that Jewish learning, wisdom, and community is as strong a support for today鈥檚 students as it was for me, given the difficult time in which we are living,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淏ringing the Torah here today gives the students a physical, tactile reminder of history, survival, learning and community.鈥

Helping welcome the Torah to its new home was Macalester Executive Vice President and Provost Lisa Anderson-Levy, who believes the sacred text will serve as a source of connection for the entire Mac community.
鈥淔or Jewish students and employees, this Torah offers a sense of rootedness and continuity. For those who aren鈥檛 Jewish, it offers opportunities to learn, to listen, to ask questions, and to encounter a tradition different from your own,鈥 Anderson-Levy said. 鈥淥ne of the joys of being here at Macalester is that no text belongs only to one group; everything becomes part of a shared conversation.鈥
Welcoming Torah鈥攖he Macalester way
The welcoming celebration was the culmination of a years-long effort from across the college and beyond. Students, staff, donors, and neighboring congregations all worked together to welcome the Torah to campus. Jessica Williams 鈥26, a student leader with Macalester Jewish Organization (MJO), designed a portable ark to house it, while Wade Oesterich, a carpenter with Facilities Services, built the piece using wood from retired dormitory bedframes. Demetrios Marcos Vital, a local scribe, painstakingly restored the mid-19th century text to its original splendor. And the scroll鈥檚 ritual clothing鈥攁 mantle and belt鈥攚ere designed and produced by students.

Miles Rakov 鈥27, a chemistry major and leader with MJO, took on the Torah鈥檚 mantle. Rakov has been sewing since attending a Jewish camp in fifth grade. 鈥淭hat we鈥檙e getting a Torah of our own, and that we can dress it ourselves, with things we鈥檝e actually made, it feels really powerful,鈥 Rakov said.
His design centers on Bdote, the Dakota word meaning 鈥渨here two waters come together鈥, and the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers just three miles south of campus. 鈥淐onnection to the land is central to the Dakota people, and this is especially true for Bdote,鈥 Rakov said. Embroidered in blue and purple, the rivers meet at the center of the mantle in a burst of color, with beadwork and stitch shapes inspired by Dakota beadwork.
鈥淚t represents how we grow and change at Mac and within MJO, and how, after we make this transformation together, we leave to find our place in a wider community that鈥檚 always changing as well,鈥 Rakov said.
Lucy Anderson 鈥28, another MJO leader, worked on the Torah鈥檚 belt, cross-stitching a pattern inspired by the pomegranate, which is the organization鈥檚 symbol. The pomegranate in Jewish tradition represents all of the mitzvot鈥攔ighteous actions that a person can take in their life.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really cool to create an item that people are going to touch and use, potentially for decades to come,鈥 said Anderson, a geography and studio art double major. 鈥淲ith that comes a little bit of pressure, but it鈥檚 an amazing way to contribute to the community and the people around me.鈥

A scroll comes home
Macalester鈥檚 new Torah may be new to campus, but this specific scroll is hardly new to the neighborhood. Believed to have originated from Moravia in the mid-19th century, the Torah was once housed at the Sons of Jacob Congregation, just blocks from campus. When that congregation closed in the early 1980s, it merged into what is now Beth Jacob Congregation in Mendota Heights鈥攁nd the scroll went with it. There, in need of repair, it has sat in the congregation鈥檚 ark unused for decades.

As demand for on-campus Jewish religious practice鈥攊ncluding shabbat and holiday services, and b鈥檔ai mitzvah celebrations鈥攈as grown in recent years, MJO leaders have felt the need for a scroll that the college could call its own. Stepping in to help fill that need were Howard Berkenblit and Tina Schaper, parents of MJO alum Ellie Berkenblit 鈥24. The couple generously offered to provide the necessary gift to bring a Torah to Mac. When Beth Jacob graciously agreed to donate its damaged scroll, the family鈥檚 gift provided the necessary funds for repair.
鈥淲e are so grateful that our daughter Ellie was able to find a way not only to continue to nourish her Jewish identity at Mac but that she was able to find such a vibrant, impactful, supportive organization in MJO,鈥 Berkenblit and Schaper said. 鈥淲ith MJO now having its own Torah, generations of Mac students will have increased opportunities to learn and to pass on Jewish values and traditions.鈥
Rabbi Kippley-Ogman echoes that sentiment: 鈥淲elcoming a scroll is a real embodiment of the ongoing learning, wrestling, challenging, and questioning that is the core practice of Jewish community.鈥
A Torah for the generations
Gabriela Helf 鈥23, now in her first year of rabbinical school at the Jewish Theological Seminary in New York, returned to Minnesota to lead a blessing at the welcoming ceremony with fellow alum Rabbi Heather Renetzky 鈥15. As a student, Helf was an MJO leader and said the experience helped light her path forward.

鈥淚t was the first place at Mac where I really found my community,鈥 Helf said. 鈥淚 also got a lot of practice in being a leader in a ritual setting, in a prayer setting, and in a kind of community organizing setting鈥攖hat was a really wonderful experience.鈥
To return to community鈥攂ound together by a shared sense of joy and the knowledge that this Torah would carry their community鈥檚 story forward鈥攚as the highlight for so many in attendance.
鈥淭o be in the chapel surrounded by all my friends, it鈥檚 just so exciting,鈥 Helf said. 鈥淎nd to be a part of a really big celebration across generations, I think we all needed that right now.鈥
鈥淲hen reading the Torah, to get from one story to another, you have to actually pass through all the other stories, because you have to physically move the scroll past each one,鈥 Rabbi Kippley-Ogman said. 鈥淚n the impermanence of the student community, this is an invitation to a sense of continuity. This story is directly connected to one that came before, even though you weren鈥檛 here, even though those people are not here anymore, the thread is present.鈥
