Extensive Definition
A bimah (among Ashkenazim,
derived from Greek ) or
tebah (among Sephardim) is the
elevated area or platform in a Jewish synagogue which is intended to
serve as the place where the person reading aloud from the Torah stands during
the Torah reading
service. The bimah is sometimes described as an altar or tower. The bimah was located in
the center of the synagogue most likely just as the temporary
wooden bimah (this is the origin of the term) was central to the
"women's courtyard" of the Temple
in Jerusalem during the Hakhel ceremony.
This later became a sign of the Orthodox
synagogue in the mid-nineteenth
century. The Reform
(Neolog) temples moved the bimah to the front of the temple facing
the congregation. One of the well-known decrees of the Chatam Sofer
was that the bimah must remain in the center of an Orthodox
synagogue.
The bimah is typically elevated by two or three
steps, as was the bimah in the Temple. At the celebration of the
Shavuot
holiday when synagogues are decorated with flowers, many synagogues
have special arches that they place over the bimah and adorn with
floral displays. The importance of the bimah is to show that the
reader is the most important at that moment in time, and to make it
easier to hear their reader of the Torah.
A bimah in a synagogue will generally have a
table to rest the Torah scroll on. Many synagogues also have a
stand upon which the Torah is placed while it is being
dressed.
See also
bimah in Czech: Bima
bimah in German: Bima
bimah in French: Bimah
bimah in Japanese: ビーマー
bimah in Polish: Bima