Habad mainstream. See Dein,
What Really
Happens
, 113-21; Foxbrunner,
Habad
, 52; Friedman and Heilman,
The Rebbe;
24-7; Wolfson,
Open
Secret
, 356 n. 67; Shandler,
Jews
, 230-74. This illustrates how difficult it is to draw a clear-cut
distinction between different factions within contemporary Habad.
5
On the neutralization of messianism in Hasidism in the aftermath of Sabbatianism, see Scholem,
Major Trends
,
328-30;
idem,
The Messianic Idea
, 176-202.
6
See for example Mindel,
Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Lyady
, ii, ‘The Philosophy of Chabad’.
Dr Nissan
Mindel (1912-99) was a follower of Habad, and for many years served as the secretary, first of the
sixth and then of the seventh Lubavitcher rebbe. He was also engaged in the communication of Habad
teachings to a broad audience, which included translations of
Tanya
and of
Lubavitcher Rabbi’s
Memoirs
, and a book in two volumes on Shneur Zalman, which contains the biography of Shneur
Zalman and an exposition of his teachings based on
Tanya
; the third volume, based on Mindel’s
manuscripts on
Torah or
and
Likutei Torah,
is scheduled for publication by Nissan Mindel
Publications. On the alleged rationalism and philosophical inclination of Rashaz, see Stamler,
“Sekhel,” 1-3, 195-7.
13
have tended to focus on early Habad’s preoccupation with the transcendent God,
while neglecting altogether its view of history, be it Godly or profane.
7
The present study attempts to fill this gap by investigating temporality and
history within worldly existence in the teachings of Habad’s founder, Rabbi Shneur
Zalman of Liadi (henceforth Rashaz, 1745-1812). It springs from the question, which
first drew me to the topic, of the extent to which the temporal discourse – so central
to contemporary Habad – might be found already in the teachings of the founder of
the movement. To establish this, it was necessary to address critically the
harmonistic Habad perspective on all the Habad-Lubavitch rebbes as transmitters of
the same, unified and self-contained tradition referred to in Habad parlance as the
“words of the living God” [
divrei Elokim hayim
]. This internal perspective is at odds
with the prevailing academic approach, which discerns an ideological discontinuity
between early Habad and its 20
th
-century incarnations.
8
While the development of
Habad’s doctrine over time, all the way from Rashaz to Menahem Mendel
Schneerson, lies beyond the scope of the present thesis, the ideas of the latter were
the ones that first struck me as arising from the teachings of the former.
Another factor that influenced my approach to the subject was the paradigm
shift that occurred within Hasidic scholarship when Scholem's notion of the
neutralisation of the messianic idea in Hasidism was contested if not quite rejected.
9
7
See for example Elior, “Mekomo shel adam,” 47-9, in which hasidic thought is explicitly defined as
theocentric. Foxbrunner can be seen as an exception, as he devoted a short sub-chapter to the issue of
the cosmic history, see Foxbrunner,
Habad
, 78–93.
8
See Elior, “The Lubavitch Resurgence,” 387. For a long time, there existed no scholarly work that
provided an overall account of the Habad teaching from its inception to the present. This changed
recently, with Eliot Wolfson’s
Open Secret
and Dov Schwartz’s
Mahashevet
Habad
as the most
notable examples.
9
Scholem first formulated his thesis on the ‘neutralised’ nature of Hasidic messianism in his 1941
Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism
(329-331), and he subsequently referred to it briefly in some of his
other writings during the 1950s and 60s. For the early critique of this thesis, see Tishby’s 1967 “Ha-
ra’ayon ha-meshihi,” which was the trigger for Scholem’s fully developed thesis, published in his
1971 “The Neutralisation of the Messianic Element”. For later revisions of Scholem’s thesis, see Idel,
Hasidism
, 16-7; idem,
Messianic Mystics
, 212-13, 223, 237-8; idem, “Mystical Redemption,” 12-19
idem, “Multiple Forms,” 58-69.
14
This has opened up new perspectives on Hasidic messianism in general, and on
Habad messianism in particular. In my graduate paper “The Messianic Concept in
Tanya
,” written in 2009 for the Hebrew Studies Department of the University of
Warsaw, I attempted to look at
Tanya
from a “post-neutralisation” perspective, and
discovered that messianism was conspicuously present in Rashaz’s teachings. This
was still apparent to the Habad author Haim Yitshak Bunin, who in his 1936
elucidation of Tanya, devoted a special section to messianism and eschatology.
10
But
his book was generally ignored by scholars, and it is hardly ever mentioned in
subsequent studies of Rashaz.
11
Only the attention paid in recent years to the
messianic doctrine of the last Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menahem Mendel Schneerson, has
led a number of scholars to the realisation that the acute messianism of post-
Holocaust Habad was deeply rooted in teachings that can be traced back to Rashaz.
12
The present thesis aims to consider Rashaz’s messianic doctrine without resort to the
axiom of the neutralisation of hasidic messianism, highlighting Rashaz’s keen
interest in time, history and the end of days, which has not so far been addressed
systematically in hasidic scholarship.
The paradigm shift mentioned above has also shifted the academic focus
from the theoretical to the experiential dimension of Jewish mysticism. Following
the publication of Idel’s
Hasidism – Between Ecstasy and Magic
, several scholars
have begun to examine expressions of religious experience in the speculative
teachings of the early hasidic masters.
13
Yet the Habad experience, perhaps because
of its “rational” or “philosophical” reputation, has remained by and large ignored. As
Loewenthal points out, the scholarship on Habad has tended to focus on the
acosmistic aspects of Rashaz’s teachings and sees the spiritual project of early
Habad, above all else, as the quest to transcend worldliness and dissolve in
10
Bunin,
Mishneh Habad
, v, “Mishnat mashi’ah, ‘olam ha-ba u-tehiyat ha-metim.” On this book, see
Scholem,
Ha-shalav ha-aharon
, 380-2; Niger and Shatzky,
Leksikon
, v. i, 266; Reisen,
Leksikon
, v.i,
243-4.
11
Foxbrunner (
Habad
, 85-8 and 91-2) is an exception, having devoted to this issue several pages of
his book.
12
See Wolfson,
Open Secret
, and Schwartz,
Mahashevet Habad
.
13
See for example Kaufmann,
Be-khol derakhekha da’ehu
; Margolin,
Mikdash adam
; Mark,
Mysticism and Madness
.
15
divinity.
14
This approach has yielded important studies of Habad’s mystical path to
self-nullification and integration in the divine nothingness by means of
contemplative prayer and study, yet it has overlooked the equally important, worldly
dimension of the early Habad doctrine, which the present thesis addresses as its
central concern.
Following Loewenthal,
15
I see Rashaz’s teachings as the means by which he
communicated a particular religious experience to every one of his followers, and I
believe that the richness of the ideas he adapted to his community’s needs was what
made Rashaz such a successful hasidic leader. His teachings convey a multi-
dimensional worldview that cannot be reduced either to a complex of theological
ideas or to a set of practical instructions on how to lead the ideal religious or spiritual
life. In fact, his vast corpus of teachings imparts a sense of religious experience,
which is governed by the daily, weekly and yearly cycles of the individual’s
mundane life, while at the same time connecting him to the multigenerational
congregation of Israel which, although it is subject to history, aims at transcending it
by integration in the supra-temporal divine. In focusing on the concept of time, I aim
to explore this particular notion of religious life, and to demonstrate the mystical and
the mundane, the intellectual and the experiential, the individual and the communal
dimensions of Rashaz’s teaching.
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