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Where Are the 600,000 Letters of the Torah?


Question:

I have been told that that there are 600,000 letters in the Torah scroll, and I always understood this to be the case. However, I was recently made aware that if one actually counts the letters, one would find that there are just over half that amount of letters in a standard Torah scroll. How do we reconcile the number 600,000 with the more accurate count?

Response:

There are 304,805 plus letters in the Torah, but as you noted, we often hear of the 600,000 letters in the Torah. Several non-standard methods of counting are offered to arrive at the number 600,000.

One is given by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of Chabad. The letters of the Torah are accompanied by cantillation marks that tell us how to sing the words. These markings are included in the count of 600,000. As well, the count includes vowel letters that are not included in the text, but are implied in the pronunciation of the word. If they were all to be written out, there would be many more letters in a Torah scroll.

Another view explains that the count of 304,805 letters includes only those that we see, black ink against white parchment. But there are also the letters in white against black. The heavenly, non-physical version of the Torah is described as black fire on white fire, and both the black and white are equally meaningful. The black are the letters we see, while the white, the inverse space between the black, are the letters we don't see. The count of 600,000 includes both the black and the white letters.

Knowing this, there's an interesting law about the writing in a Torah scroll that now makes a lot of sense: If any letter has no space around it, the entire Torah is invalid, even though all the letters are complete. According to what we've just said, this is easy to understand: Although the revealed black letters would be complete, a hidden white letter would be missing.

There's yet more significance to the idea of inverse letters. The 600,000 letters correspond to the 600,000 souls of Israel. Although there are many more than 600,000 Jews, there are 600,000 general souls which divide into the individual sparks that become each of our souls. Some are of the black letters; their place in Torah is clear. It holds their life and purpose. The black stands out in strong contrast to the surrounding space.

Those of the inverse, white letters may not see where they fit into Torah. The space around the letter isn't seen in its own right, it simply enables the black letter to be seen. Perhaps a soul is here to allow another to shine, but that soul is integral. If a black letter lacks the surrounding white letters, the entire scroll is invalid.


Editor's Note:
Every Jewish child and adult should own a letter in a Torah scroll. Read more about how to do that at A Letter in a Torah Scroll.
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By Malkie Janowski   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Aug 15, 2010
the significance of the Hebrew Letters
I see that our quotation marks, do resemble the YOD, as in YOD YOD, and I am saying I see within all words, the Hebrew letters, and I find myself sometimes on my knees with what I am gifted to see, namely, a script we did not write and that we are truly co-creating the universe.

I once wrote about the SHIN in SHINE, and I think people thought me quite "out there", but for me, the SHIN is truly, a menorah, and so how beautiful, how relevant this is. And if no one ever perceives it, as I do, it doesn't matter. What I am gifted to see, what throws me to my knees, at every turn, is a story, so beautiful, so amazing, so incredible, I see the menorah in cacti, in plants, wherever I turn.

We are all one soul, and I do deeply believe that RUAH, the soul, that embodies the compassion of Ruth, well that soul, to reach that soul, through our own compassion, is the "key". We are gifted a story that turns on the letters themselves. However we write about this, it all does deeply connect
Posted By ruth housman, marshfield hills, ma

Posted: Aug 12, 2010
600,000+
Presumably, the significance of the number 600,000 is based on the recorded census of the Jewish people leaving egypt and recorded in the "written" Torah and thus has eternal significance for all time.

The census number is 603,550.

Our sages are telling us that the Jewish souls are bound up in and relate to the Torah at an essential level. Whether you know how and what to count is beside the point.
Posted By Naftaly

Posted: Aug 12, 2010
Black letters, white letters
What a beautiful concept! Many of us want to be "black letters," and may feel disappointed in our lives if we aren't, but the total picture, how G-d sees us, is that the white letters, too, the folks who make up the unnoticed background, are also essential. I hope that I can keep that idea in my thoughts.
Posted By Sara Fishman, Worcester, MA



 


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