My Economy

The bookbinder who specializes in repairing bibles

Bennett Purser May 7, 2019
HTML EMBED:
COPY
Bible pages in repair at Abrami Book Bindery Courtesy of Rosemary Abrami
My Economy

The bookbinder who specializes in repairing bibles

Bennett Purser May 7, 2019
Bible pages in repair at Abrami Book Bindery Courtesy of Rosemary Abrami
HTML EMBED:
COPY

Rosemary Abrami moved to the Valley of the Sun in Arizona with her husband when he became the rabbi at the local synagogue. She was retired, Jewish and her new community didn’t have a university, which had always been her main source of work as a book binder.

But what the area lacked in higher education, it made up for it with old bibles. Her business, Abrami Bookbindery, was back.

With the help of the people at the LifeWay Christian bookstore, a national chain with 170 locations, she became known as the town’s go-to bible repair woman. The store referred all customers in need to Rosemary, sending her 85% of her business. LifeWay became her lifeblood. Then, the company announced the closure of all brick & mortar stores. The impact on Abrami Bookbindery was felt immediately.

Rosemary Abrami on her 71st Birthday.

Here’s Rosemary’s story, in her own words:

“My name is Rosemary Abrami. I’m a bookbinder. My business name is Abrami Bookbindery. It’s a small business, but I have a very specific market: rebinding, repairing and restoring Bibles. But for about the last eight to 10 years, approximately 85% of my work has been referred to me by the LifeWay Christian Bookstore. I first heard that Lifeway was closing the brick-and-mortar stores when a customer came in and said ‘Did you know that they are closing’ and I said ‘good grief, no.’ And I have already seen a significant influence on the number of people who are being referred to me.

“Most Bibles are not bound in real leather and it wears out eventually. I work only in genuine leather so that by the time I’ve bound a book for somebody, it’s going to last and last and last. But the important thing is inside the books, where people have underlined, highlighted and made notes. That’s what makes the book valuable. People will spend a bit of money because that particular book means a lot to them.

“A guy brought me a Jewish prayer book and it was in terrible condition. And I said to him, ‘There is so much work involved in this. It’s going to take me hours and it’s going to cost you a fortune.’ And he looked at me and he said ‘Rose, my brother carried this through the concentration camps. You fix it!’ And I fixed it. It’s not the book. It’s what the book stands for.

“I honestly don’t know exactly what I’m going to do. I don’t know where to go, and I don’t know how to get my name out there so that people can find me. I’ve tried Yellow Pages. I’ve tried Facebook. I’ve got a Google website. They don’t bring me work. What brings me work is referrals, people, people, people.”

There’s a lot happening in the world.  Through it all, Marketplace is here for you. 

You rely on Marketplace to break down the world’s events and tell you how it affects you in a fact-based, approachable way. We rely on your financial support to keep making that possible. 

Your donation today powers the independent journalism that you rely on. For just $5/month, you can help sustain Marketplace so we can keep reporting on the things that matter to you.