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Parents Donate Sefer Torah, And Sons Seizures Stop


domatov.jpgThe following are excerpts from an article in today’s Miami Herald: 

Through the heat, humidity and traffic, more than 100 people sang in Hebrew and danced in joy down Stirling Road in Cooper City on Sunday, following the sacred scroll that they said marked a miracle.

Gabi Damatov, now 17, suffered from horrific seizures since he was 16 months old. Gabi doesn’t remember any of them, saying he would wake up in his bed or a hospital bed and know he had another seizure.

His parents tried every medicine, every prayer, but nothing worked.

Until one day several years ago, when Gabi’s mother, Shoshi Damatov, said the family would dedicate a Torah scroll to its synagogue, Chabad of Southwest Broward, if Gabi’s seizures stopped.

Since then, Gabi has had only a few seizures, going almost three years without one until this past February.

”I’m going to have a lot more freedom,” Gabi said with a smile about life without the seizures.

And so the Damatovs kept their end of the bargain with the Lord.

More than a year ago, the Damatovs commissioned a scribe in Israel to write a Torah scroll, which contains a handwritten version of the Five Books of Moses in Hebrew.

Or, as Gabi put it: “Torah is one of the biggest parts of the Jewish religion.”

Several months ago, the scroll arrived in South Florida, almost complete except for about 65 letters, which were to be filled in at the dedication ceremony, Rabbi Pinny Andrusier said.

But they got a new sense of urgency when Gabi suddenly had a seizure in February. It was Gabi’s first seizure in almost three years.

His family believes he suffered the seizure after accidentally smelling fried fish — one of three things well-known healing rabbi Yitzchak Kaduri warned Gabi to avoid.

The Damatovs immediately pushed ahead with the Torah’s dedication ceremony, deciding the best day would be Sunday, which also was Shavuot, the holiday celebrating the Jews receiving the Torah at Mount Sinai.

Sunday afternoon, friends and family members streamed into the Damatov home in the Embassy Lakes neighborhood. The Torah, decked in a gleaming custom metallic case, sat on a table, waiting for its moment.

(Photo: Miami Herald)



5 Responses

  1. Wow what a coincidence!
    Comment by iib001

    There is no such thing as a “coincidence” Why not be a believer? You CAN and are allowed to make deals with Hashem.

  2. To be honest I believe this is a direct miracle preformed by Ha-Shem and as a Jew that is Shomer Torah I also believe that for whatever reason Ha-Shem had decreed that such a donation will cure this child’s aliment maybe it is some type of a Tikun.

    What I was trying to prove is that this format of comments is used primarily for Orthodox Jews to attack other Jews and not for the purpose of one sharing his/her opinion or thoughts.

  3. #5 read on in the article – it says he had that seizure after smelling fired fish, something Rav Kaduri warned him to avoid.

    It sounds to me like perhaps it was Rav Kaduri who advised them to donate the sefer Torah in the first place, but to still avoid certain things, such as smelling fried fish. I’m sure there’s a mystical reason he gave these suggestions.

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