Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Editors and Advisers
- Contents
- Polin
- Statement From the Editors
- ARTICLES
- The Reconstruction of Pre-Ashkenazic Jewish Settlements in the Slavic Lands in the Light of Linguistic Sources
- Jewish Perceptions of lnsecurity and Powerlessness in 16th-18th Century Poland
- Some Basic Characteristics of the Jewish Experience in Poland
- The Changes in the Attitude of Polish Society Toward theJews in the 18th Century
- Eros and Enlightenment: Love Against Marriage in the East European Jewish Enlightenment
- Polish-Jewish Relations and the January Uprising: The Polish Perspective
- Loyalty to the Crown or Polish Patriotism? The Metamorphoses of an Anti-Polish Story of the 1863 Insurrection
- The Polish Revolt of 1863 and the Birth of Russification: Bad for the Jews?
- A Turning Point in the History of Polish Socialism and its Attitude Towards the Jewish Question
- The Question of the Assimilation of Jews in the Polish Kingdom (1864-1897): An Interpretive Essay
- The Secular Appropriation of Hasidism by an East European Jewish Intellectual: Dubnow, Renan, and the Besht
- Some Methodological Problems of the Study of Jewish History in Poland Between the Two World Wars
- Jews and Poles in Yiddish Literature in Poland Between the Two World Wars
- Is There a Jewish School of Polish Literature?
- The Underground Movement in Auschwitz Concentration Camp
- DOCUMENTS
- INTERVIEW
- A DIALOGUE
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ESSAYS
- BOOK REVIEWS
- CONTRIBUTORS
The Secular Appropriation of Hasidism by an East European Jewish Intellectual: Dubnow, Renan, and the Besht
from ARTICLES
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Editors and Advisers
- Contents
- Polin
- Statement From the Editors
- ARTICLES
- The Reconstruction of Pre-Ashkenazic Jewish Settlements in the Slavic Lands in the Light of Linguistic Sources
- Jewish Perceptions of lnsecurity and Powerlessness in 16th-18th Century Poland
- Some Basic Characteristics of the Jewish Experience in Poland
- The Changes in the Attitude of Polish Society Toward theJews in the 18th Century
- Eros and Enlightenment: Love Against Marriage in the East European Jewish Enlightenment
- Polish-Jewish Relations and the January Uprising: The Polish Perspective
- Loyalty to the Crown or Polish Patriotism? The Metamorphoses of an Anti-Polish Story of the 1863 Insurrection
- The Polish Revolt of 1863 and the Birth of Russification: Bad for the Jews?
- A Turning Point in the History of Polish Socialism and its Attitude Towards the Jewish Question
- The Question of the Assimilation of Jews in the Polish Kingdom (1864-1897): An Interpretive Essay
- The Secular Appropriation of Hasidism by an East European Jewish Intellectual: Dubnow, Renan, and the Besht
- Some Methodological Problems of the Study of Jewish History in Poland Between the Two World Wars
- Jews and Poles in Yiddish Literature in Poland Between the Two World Wars
- Is There a Jewish School of Polish Literature?
- The Underground Movement in Auschwitz Concentration Camp
- DOCUMENTS
- INTERVIEW
- A DIALOGUE
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL ESSAYS
- BOOK REVIEWS
- CONTRIBUTORS
Summary
A survey of the changing attitude of modernized Jews to Hasidism might begin with Solomon Maimon, that 18th-century Kantian, who in his youth had personal contact with the Hasidic movement at a time when it was beginning its spectacular growth in the southern districts of Poland and the Ukraine. Maimon provides information of great historical value about Hasidism and offers some acute speculations concerning its appeal. But there is no gainsaying his disdain for a pietism so contrary to the canons of reason, as reason was understood by the 18th-century Enlightenment. In the chapter of his autobiography dealing with the attractiveness of the movement and its leadership, Maimon writes:
The fact that this sect spread so rapidly, and that the new doctrine met with so much approbation, may be very easily explained. The natural inclination to idleness and a life of speculation on the part of the majority, who are destined from birth to study, the dryness and unfruitfulness of rabbinical studies, the great burden of the ceremonial law which the new doctrine promised to lighten, the tendency to fanaticism and the love of the marvellous, which are nourished by this doctrine, these are sufficient to make this phenomenon intelligible.
It is an overstatement to say that the Haskalah attitude to Hasidism was totally vitriolic, as I shall show later, but denunciation of the Hasidim as superstitious obscurantists and of the rebbes as charlatans and scoundrels was certainly the norm in maskilic circles. Another example of a critic of the Hasidic movement, who knew something of it at first hand, was the well-known Galician maskil Joseph Perl, whose in-laws were Hasidim.
Around 1816 Perl took up the cudgels of the Kulturkampf, of the sons of light versus the sons of darkness, by writing an influential anti-Hasidic work, Über das Wesen der Sekte Chassidim. In 1819 Perl wrote his wellknown satire, Megalleh Temirin (The Revealer of Secrets), one of the most delightful and cruel works of Haskalah literature. In Megalleh Temirin, Israel Zinberg notes, the Hasidim of Volhynia and Galicia and their rabbis are portrayed in only one colour - ‘pitch black'.
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- Poles and Jews: Renewing the Dialogue , pp. 151 - 162Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2004