A depiction of a Torah scroll can be made from two empty paper towel rolls covered with blue cloth. Glue two long dowels in place as the handles.
Non-Jewish answerThey keep it high up on a shelf and make sure no one can take it. they use a stick to turn the pages.Jewish answer:Physical careTorah-scrolls are wrapped in a velvet mantle and are kept in the front of the synagogue in a heavy, special cabinet.Spiritual careWe care for the Torah by learning it and obeying it.
Lots of beans
you could use a spring balance kg * 9.81 = newtons
You can use soda cans or even water bottles
From Limestone.
get two of the same scrolls and an item, click the scrolls twice, and drop the item you want to duplicate, the more scrolls you have the more duplications you make, you can also duplicate scrolls for bigger duplications
idkkkk Get a digital handheld recorder and go through every room in your house recording different actions to make household sound effects, like door slams, kitchen sound effects, light switches, etc. Household sound effects are one of the most common type of sound effects.
papyrus
PAPYRUS
Torah scrolls vary widely in physical size. The text of every Torah is hand-written in 245 columns, of 42 lines in each column, but the height of the script and the width of the columns varies over a wide range among scrolls. As a frequent reader, I'll estimate for you that a typical scroll used for the public synagogue reading may run something like 1 foot per column. That would make the entire scroll 245-ft long, which would be in the neighborhood of 75 meters. That should be taken only as a rough, generic guesstimate, from the ballpark.
The Gemara is the commentary of the Torah-sages on the Oral Torah. Together, the Oral Torah (Mishna) and the Gemara make up the Talmud.
Take a long piece of scroll paper and dye it with coffee and it looks like ancient looking scrolls.