Soon after the project's public launch in 2009, Rabbi
Zalman Schachter-Shalomi shared
Siddur Tefillat Hashem Yedaber Pi, his creative translation of the daily prayer service. (In an interview made in the early 1980s, Reb Zalman described a software service like the Open Siddur Project.) In 2010, the first complete
siddur was shared with an Open Content license: Rabbi Rallis Weisenthal's
Siddur Sefas Yisroel representing the traditions of the
Bad Homburg Jewish community. A nearly complete siddur representing the practice of Jews in the Ḥabad movement of ḥassidim, was transcribed and shared in modular sections by Open Siddur Project volunteer, Shmueli Gonzales. Aharon Varady completed a digital transcription of the
Pri Etz Hadar seder for Tu biShvat along with a free-culture licensed translation by Rabbi Dr.
Miles Krassen. Efraim Feinstein created a demonstration of a transliteration engine for automatically transliterating texts according to adaptable transliteration schemas. The
Jewish Publication Society shared its digital edition of the
JPS 1917 through the project. In 2011, the Open Siddur helped to share a complete digital transcription of
Yehoash Blumgarten's Yiddish translation of the
Tanakh. In 2012, the project completed its first transcription of a prayer book, transcribing
Fanny Schmiedl-Neuda's
Stunden Der Andacht at German Wikisource. The project has since completed transcriptions of several other collections of women's prayers from the 19th century:
Hours of Devotion (Fanny Schmiedl-Neuda, translated by Moritz Mayer, 1866),
אמרי לב – Meditations And Prayers For Every Situation And Occasion In Life (Rabbi
Arnaud Aron and
Jonas Ennery, translated by Hester Rothschild, 1855), and
Hanna. Gebet- und Andachtsbuch für israelitische Frauen und Mädchen (
Jacob Freund et al., 1867). In 2014, the project published a complete transcription of
Megillat Antiochus in Aramaic accompanied by its medieval Hebrew translation, a pre-War Yiddish translation, and Tzvi Hirsh Fillipowski's translation in English. == Community ==