Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Natalia Kadish
Everyone agrees that around the middle of the eighteenth century, a movement began in Eastern
Europe that had a far-reaching, even revolutionary, impact on Jewish practice and thought. What
exactly that movement was (and is) all about, remains rather fuzzy. Thats not hard to understand,
since the movement itself is by nature enigmatic.
Perhaps the most common description of the Chassidic movement frames it as a kind of social
upheaval. Until this time, there was a pecking order in the Jewish worldscholars on top, the simple
Jew at the bottom, and the illiterate boor only nominally Jewish. In the minds of many, a great soul
and a great mind were practically synonymous. Then the Baal Shem Tov came and uplifted the
status of the common man and woman, celebrating the heartfelt earnestness of a simple Jew,
declaring that this raised him higher than the cold, intellectual, and often self-infatuated scholar.
Certainly there is truth to this vignettein fact, letters of the period demonstrate that the principal
opposition to this movement was over just this issue: scholars felt their status was being diminished,
and that the common people would no longer pay the respect due to the learned man of Torah.1 Yet
it is far from sufficient, because the Baal Shem Tov and his students were themselves erudite
scholars who greatly valued study of Torah, both its esoteric and legalistic aspects. Some of the
greatest contributions of that era to Talmudic and halachic scholarship are from these men.
It is often said that Chassidut replaced fear and trembling with love and joy.
Another common description is that the Chassidic movement taught Jews to serve G-d with love and
joy rather than fear and trembling, to sing and dance rather than cry and fast. What concerns G-d
the most, the Baal Shem Tov would preach, is that you serve Him with your heart. Love G-d, even if
you dont always understand His ways; love His Torah, even if you can barely read the words; and
most of all, love one another, even if that other doesnt measure up to the expectations of G-d and
His Torah. And celebrate all of the above.
Yet, taken alone, this is also misleading. For the chassidim were also known for their meticulousness
in the details of Jewish ritual and practice, for extending themselves much further than the strict
requirements of halachah, in consonance with the Talmudic dictum, Who is a chassid? One who
goes beyond the letter of the law.
Still another narrative describes the Chassidic movement as an outcome of the esoteric teachings
of Rabbi Yitzchak Luria, the Arizal, the great sixteenth-century Kabbalist of Tzfat, whose ideas
captured the imagination of much of the scholarly Jewish world. The Arizals teachings provided a
comprehensive theology of Jewish practice that felt far more native to the Jewish soul than the
apologetics of the philosophers. The Baal Shem Tov and his students were all deeply immersed in
these teachings.
Yet still insufficient. The teachings of the chassidic masters are not exclusively esoteric and
kabbalistic. Kabbalah speaks in abstractions comprehensible only to the most elevated soul.
Chassidut can do that as well, but it also speaks in down-to-earth, pragmatic terms for the everyman
in his everyday world.
Chassidut is not a conglomeration of ideas, but one simple essence with many facets.
Obviously, the Chassidic movement as it embodies the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov is not a
conglomeration of ideas, but one simple concept that shows itself in many facets. That idea is so
deep, so essential, that we find ourselves incapable of iterating it directly with words. But perhaps,
as the junction of two lines define a point, with some metaphor and explanation we can locate the
essence-point of Chassidut.
a time when the journey had become too wearisome, when the Torah appeared to be weighing us
down rather than carrying us through.
It was a time when we stood at a threshold. The violent pillaging of the Cossack revolt had disrupted
the infrastructure of the major Jewish settlements. Already, the Jews of Western Europe had begun
to assimilate, and the winds of secularization were blowing eastward. It was only a matter of time
before Jewish practice and belief would come face to face with its most inexorable challenge, the
skeptical, free-thinking, socially mobile world of modernity.
There came a time when we had to reach to the essence-core.
At this point, we needed not just another strategy, not just another secret of the Torah revealed to us.
We needed a charge of light from its very core. Our souls had to make contact and bond with the
very soul of this Torah that we carried.
Bonding
This explains what I would say is the signature motif of chassidic teachings. If it is an authentic
teaching, and it has been presented in a lucid form, then it resonates as no other teaching does. You
absorb it not as received tradition, but as one who hears the song singing within his own soul.
Through Chassidut, no longer are the Torah and the Jew two separate beings, one instructing and
one being instructed, one commanding and the other commanded. Chassidut is life; as the body and
soul fuse to become a single living being, so the Jew bonds with these teachings as though they
were his own souland is carried by them through the most stalwart challenges, as an indefatigable
soul carries the body through fire and ice.
Here, too, a significant detail of the Baal Shem Tovs life comes into play: He was born on the
eighteenth day of the final month of the year, the month of Elul. Elul is the month when the Jewish
soul begins to shine, in preparation for the Days of Awe at the beginning of the coming year.
Eighteen, in Jewish numerology, stands for life.