16
making them available in print. In 1837 in Kapust, and 1848 in Zhitomir, he
published two volumes of Rashaz’s homilies on the weekly Torah portions,
Torah
or
and
Likutei Torah
. Teachings pertaining to prayer were included in Rashaz’s prayer
book,
Seder tefilot mi-kol ha-shanah
, first published in Kapust in 1816, and an
additional
collection of unpublished
ma’amarim
appeared in Jerusalem in 1926 as
Boneh Yerushalayim
. However, the more comprehensive publication of Rashaz’s
sermons began only in the second half of the twentieth century, when Habad’s Kehot
Publishing House brought out a series of volumes
entitled
Ma’merei Admor ha-
Zaken
. This process continues to some extent to the present day, as brochures of re-
discovered copies of homilies are published occasionally in print and online.
Another important segment of Rashaz’s corpus,
generally overlooked by
scholars interested in the philosophical or theological dimensions of the Habad
tradition, are his halakhic works. Two of them were published in Rashaz’s lifetime in
Shklov:
Hilekhot talmud Torah
in 1794 (Compendium of the Laws of Torah Study),
and
Seder birkhot ha-nehenin
in 1800 (Laws of Blessings for Enjoyment). His other
legal writings were compiled posthumously into
Shulhan
arukh Rabenu ha-Zaken
,
published by his sons in Kopys and Shklov in 1814 and 1816.
16
Rashaz’s writings also include
a large number of letters, addressed
collectively to his hasidic communities or to certain individuals. Some of these
letters contain mystical teachings while others issue instructions to remote Habad
communities; some relate to Rashaz’s involvement in fund
raising for the hasidic
settlement in the Land of Israel, and some testify to his controversies with other
hasidic leaders and with
mitnagdim
or with non-hasidic Jews. In general, the letters
provide invaluable insights not only into Rashaz’s style of leadership but also into
the model of spirituality he propagated. They were first
collected and published by
David Zvi Hillman in Jerusalem, in 1953, as
Igerot Ba’al ha-Tanya u-venei doro
.
Later, Kehot published a new edition of Rashaz’s letters in two volumes, entitled
Igerot kodesh
(together with the letters of Dov Ber Shneuri [1773-1827] and
Menahem Mendel the Tsemah Tsedek).
16
On the publication of Rashaz’s halakhic works, see Mondshine,
Sifrei ha-halakhah
.
17
Finally, there is the book
Tanya
, the publication of which in 1796 in
Slavuta
17
established one of the unique features of the Habad school of Hasidism: the
Tanya
is the first more or less systematic exposition of a hasidic model of
spirituality. It is one of four of Rashaz’s books to be published during his lifetime,
and the only one of them that concentrates on his mystical teachings. As Rashaz
explains in a letter that precedes the printed versions of the work, it was
written to
provide his followers with a manual of direct spiritual guidance so as to render
regular personal contact with him unnecessary. Effectively, the book was to serve as
a substitute for the experience of listening to Rashaz’s homilies. Additionally, in
1981,
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