Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Note on Sources
- Note on Pronunciation
- Introduction to the Paperback Edition: Joseph Weiss Today
- Editor's Introduction
- Publisher's Note
- STUDIES IN EAST EUROPEAN JEWISH MYSTICISM AND HASIDISM
- Some Notes on the Social Background of Early Hasidism
- A Circle of Pneumatics in Pre-Hasidism
- Contemplative Mysticism and “Faith” in Hasidic Piety
- Torah Study in Early Hasidism
- Via Passiva in Early Hasidism
- The Kavvanoth of Prayer in Early Hasidism
- Petitionary Prayer in Early Hasidism
- Contemplation as Solitude
- Contemplation as Self-Abandonment in the Writings of Hayyim Haika of Amdura
- R. Abraham Kalisker's Concept of Communion with God and Men
- The Authorship and Literary Unity of the Darkhei Yesharim
- The Ṣaddik-Altering the Divine Will
- The Hasidic Way of Ḥabad
- Some Notes on Ecstasy in Ḥabad Hasidism
- A Late Jewish Utopia of Religious Freedom
- Sense and Nonsense in Defining Judaism-The Strange Case of Naḥman of Brazlav
- Index
R. Abraham Kalisker's Concept of Communion with God and Men
from STUDIES IN EAST EUROPEAN JEWISH MYSTICISM AND HASIDISM
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Note on Sources
- Note on Pronunciation
- Introduction to the Paperback Edition: Joseph Weiss Today
- Editor's Introduction
- Publisher's Note
- STUDIES IN EAST EUROPEAN JEWISH MYSTICISM AND HASIDISM
- Some Notes on the Social Background of Early Hasidism
- A Circle of Pneumatics in Pre-Hasidism
- Contemplative Mysticism and “Faith” in Hasidic Piety
- Torah Study in Early Hasidism
- Via Passiva in Early Hasidism
- The Kavvanoth of Prayer in Early Hasidism
- Petitionary Prayer in Early Hasidism
- Contemplation as Solitude
- Contemplation as Self-Abandonment in the Writings of Hayyim Haika of Amdura
- R. Abraham Kalisker's Concept of Communion with God and Men
- The Authorship and Literary Unity of the Darkhei Yesharim
- The Ṣaddik-Altering the Divine Will
- The Hasidic Way of Ḥabad
- Some Notes on Ecstasy in Ḥabad Hasidism
- A Late Jewish Utopia of Religious Freedom
- Sense and Nonsense in Defining Judaism-The Strange Case of Naḥman of Brazlav
- Index
Summary
The figure of R. Abraham Kalisker (d. 1810) emerges in Hasidic tradition as that of a revivalist enfant terrible whose wild behavior scandalized practically everybody and evoked revulsion and anger even among Hasidim, to say nothing of their opponents, the Mithnaggedim. According to R. Shneur Zalman of Ladi, the Maggid of Mesritz rebuked his disciple R. Abraham in the strongest terms for his and his followers’ conduct. Hasidic tradition speaks of the “ Talk Hasidim,” the group connected with R. Abraham, as a kind of religious anarchists.
Very little is known of his teaching. He wrote no book, neither were his homilies noted down and collected by disciples. Some sayings of his appear at the end of Sefer Ḥesed Le-Avraham, but these contain little that is new or of interest to the student of the doctrinal history of Hasidism. In many respects, e.g., in his emphasis on emunah (faith), he is evidently under the influence of his older friend to whom, in a letter, he refers as his master, viz., R. Menaḥem Mendel of Vitebsk.
The letters, however, written by R. Abraham from Palestine, where he had emigrated (1777), together with R. Menahem Mendel, are full of interest in many respects. During the latter's lifetime, R. Abraham would add only a few lines to R. Menaḥem's long letters. When he died (1788), R. Abraham himself wrote long epistles containing much information concerning the life of the small Hasidic community and its relations with those around it. The epistles abound with unceasing complaints of the high and ever-rising cost of living.
Fortunately these letters comprise not only historical but also doctrinal material that both in content and literary form surpass what is otherwise extant of his teaching and homilies. Moreover, here we do not have secondhand notes made by some clumsy- handed disciple, but authentic letters of R. Abraham himself, although most probably these (like R. Menahem Mendel's letters) were dictated to a scribe.
It is intended in this article to analyze one of R. Abraham's letters—which is unfortunately undated—dealing mainly with devekuth, the ideal way of life in Hasidic theory and practice.
The letter is clearly divisible in two. The first part analyzes the concept and practice of devekuth proper, while the second part analyzes a secondary state of devekuth, namely, those phases in which, through lack of spiritual concentration, devekuth proper is not attainable.
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- Studies in East European Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism , pp. 155 - 169Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1997