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Hasidism Mysticism and Joy

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Page 1: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Hasidism

Mysticism and Joy

Page 2: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Hasidism• Mystical movement of devout Jews

– Chasid = devout, religious, pious– 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

• Best known is though the chasidism that was formed in the Eastern Europe in the 18th c.– Ukraine, Poland– 1648 – Bogdan Chmelnicky massacres– Izrael ben Eliezer Baal Shem Tov – founder of East European Chasidism– Dov Bär – his student; chasidism religious and spiritual system– First criticised by the ortodox rabbis – later became an ortodox

movement

Page 3: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Hasidism Optimistic

movement, underline the role of happiness

Traces of goodness are everywhere

Tzadik = Just – spiritual leader and a saint that mediates the communication between man and God

Page 4: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

HasidismThere’s a Hasidic tale about a famous rabbi who was on his way to teach a village that was very interested in his ideas. This was going to be a very big event, and each Jew in the community made great preparations, pondering what question he or she might ask the wise man.The rabbi finally arrived and, after the initial welcome, he was taken into a large room where people gathered to ask their questions. There was tremendous anticipation and excitement all around.The rabbi walked silently around the room and then began to hum a Hasidic tune. Before long, everyone started humming along with his soft voice. As people became comfortable with his song, the rabbi started to dance. He danced everywhere in the room, and, one by one, every person danced with him. Soon everyone in the whole community was dancing wildly together. Each person’s soul was healed by the dance, and everyone experienced a personal transformation.Later in the night, the rabbi gradually slowed the dance and eventually brought it to a stop. He looked into everyone’s eyes and said gently, “I trust that I have answered all of your questions.”

Page 5: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Hasidism• Martin Buber (1878-1965) –

philosopher – wrote popular books on chasidism– important cultural Zionist– promoted Jewish cultural renewal

through his study of Hasidic Judaism– recorded and translated Hasidic

legends and anecdotes– translated the Bible from Hebrew

into German – numerous religious studies– advocated a bi-national Israeli-

Palestinian state and argued for the renewal of society through decentralized, communitarian socialism

Page 6: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Hasidism

When asked which is the right way, that of sorrow or that of joy, Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev said: “There are two kinds of sorrow and two kinds of joy. When a person broods over his misfortunes, when he cowers in a corner and despairs of help – that is a bad kind of sorrow, concerning which it is said, ‘The Shechinah does not dwell in a place of dejection.’ The other kind [of sorrow] is the honest grief of a man who knows what he lacks. The same is true for joy. One who is devoid of inner substance and, in the midst of empty pleasures, neither feels that, nor tries to fill his lack, is a fool. [In contrast,] one who is truly joyful is like a man whose house has burned down, who feels his need deep in his soul and begins to build anew. Over every stone that is laid, his heart rejoices.”

Page 7: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Haskala

Jewish Enlightment

Page 8: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Haskala - Enlightment

• Sceptical about chasidic mysticism• The end of the 18th and the 1st half of the 19th c.– Feudal system in Europe collapses– Joseph II, Edict of Tolerance and the following edicts

• Jews became almost equal and were allowed to study at public schools

• Banned from using hebrew and „Jewish language“ in their public and commercial records

• Germanization: names to be chosen from a government-prepared list• Jews are liable for military service• Abolished rabbinical juridical autonomy• Did not gain the right of citizenship

Page 9: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Haskala Moses Mendelsohn, 18th c., Berlin

• Son of a poor scribe• Studied in Berlin where he developed friendships with

Kant and Lessing (main character of Lessing´s Nathan the Wise, spokesman for love of humanity)

• philosophical treatises• "the world results from a creative act through which the

divine will seeks to realize the highest good." • accepted the existence of miracles and revelation as long

as belief in God did not depend on them• revelation can not contradict reason• reason can discover the reality of God, divine providence

and immortality of the soul • The first to speak out against the use of excommunication

as a religious threat.• He recognized the necessity of multiple religions and respected each one :

call for religious tolerance and pluralism• Wanted to take the Jews out of a ghetto lifestyle and into secular society. • Translated Tanakh into German• Systematic demonstration of the compatibility of traditional Judaism with

the precepts of the Enlightment

Page 10: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Haskala

• Importance of education– New Jewish schools

• New rationalistic interpretation of traditional religious values often conflicts with ortodox Jews

• Reform of Judaism

Page 11: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Reform of Judaism1) Reform movement in Germany

Organ music and quires introduced into the serviceService more in the national langugageSkipping of some controversial parts (against assimilation) of the prayers

2) Conservative JudaismNew ortodoxy against reform judaismUnity of the jewish people, continuity of the jewish tradition, importance of jewish science

3) ReconstructionismDeveloped from the conservative judaism in North America since 1920´sJudaism = a type of civilisationHalakha is not considered binding, but is treated as a valuable cultural remnant that should be upheld unless there is reason for the contrary.Secular morality has precedence over Jewish law and theology. It does not ask that its adherents hold to any particular beliefs, nor does it ask that Jewish law be accepted as normative.

Page 12: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Jewish Personalities of the 19th Century

Emancipation liberated exceptional intellectual capacities

Page 13: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Albert Einstein

• 1879-1955• Sojourned in Prague

repeatedly (1911-12)• Gave here lectures on his

Theory of Relativity (1921)• “Soon I'll be fed up with

the relativity. Even such a thing fades away when one is too involved with it.“ From a letter to his wife Elsa

• 1933 has to emigrate from Germany to the USA - Princeton

Page 14: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Sigmund Freud

• 1856-1939• Born in Moravia

(Příbor/ Freiberg)• Lived in Vienna• Psychanalysis• Fled Nazis to London

in 1938 where he died (euthanasis)

Page 15: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Edmund Husserl

• 1859 - 1938• Born in Prostějov in

Moravia• Founder of modern

phenomenology• Got baptized (protestant)• Forced by Nazis to leave

the university where he taught and in 1936 he had to move out of his appartment;

Page 16: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Gustav Mahler

• 1860-1911• Born in Czech-Moravian

highlands• Lived in Vienna and

New York• Monumental

symphonies

Page 17: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Franz Kafka

• 1883-1924• Born and lived in Prague• All his sisters murdered by

Nazis in concentration camps

• Convinced sionist – was fluent in hebrew and dreamt about the life in the land of Israel

• Burried at the New Jewish Cemetery at Prague 3, Žižkov (Želivského metro stop)

Page 18: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Joseph Roth

• 1894-1939• Born in Galicia• Studied in Lvov and

Vienna – felt lost after the dissipation of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

• 1933 fled to Paris; his wife was killed by Hitler in frame of „euthanasy of mentally ill people“

Page 19: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Stephan Zweig

• 1881-1942• Born Moritz Zweig in

Vienna• World famous writer in

1920´s• Emigrated in 1938 and

he and his wife suicided themselves near Rio de Janeiro when he learnt about the Nazi rampage

Page 20: Hasidism Mysticism and Joy. Hasidism Mystical movement of devout Jews – Chasid = devout, religious, pious – 12th & 13th c. – Jehuda Chasid: Sefer Chasidim

Lion Feuchtwanger

• 1884-1958• Born in Munich• Emigrated to Los

Angeles• Active anti-fascist writer• Romans, historical

romans, theatre plays...• Josephus Flavius, The

Jewess from Toledo