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read as
metsarim
in the sense of constraints – is taken to represent the limitations of
materiality and corporeality. I discuss the exile in Egypt as the paradigm of both, the
enslavements experienced by the Jewish people throughout history, and the personal
enslavement of each and every individual within the material world. As I argue, the
hard labour performed by the Israelites during their enslavement in Egypt becomes
an allegory for worship in the state of ontological exile,
namely during life in the
material world. This is followed by discussion of Rashaz’s presentation of the
biblical exodus as the paradigm of redemption. I analyse his concept of worship
within the material world by means of prayer, Torah study and the performance of
the commandments as the only means of attaining the redemption by way of building
God’s “dwelling place in the lower worlds” [
dirah ba-tahtonim
].
While the second chapter discusses cosmic
history as the process that
ultimately leads to the redemption, the third chapter focuses on Rashaz’s
eschatology. In this chapter I highlight the distinction Rashaz makes between the
messianic days and the time of the resurrection of the dead, exploring the place and
role of the Gentile nations in the world-to-come in view of Rashaz’s conviction that
the end of days will bring about the ultimate eradication of evil and impurity, which
are clearly associated with the Gentile nations throughout his writings. I also explore
the role of the Messiah in Rashaz’s teachings, especially against the background of
the scope he allows for individual redemption within the unredeemed world, which
takes place irrespectively of time and place, and is achievable by means of the daily
ritual. I conclude the chapter with an examination of the future-to-come as the end of
history, namely, as the era in which the dynamics of
ratso va-shov
– the continuous
creation and annihilation of worlds by the descent and ascent of the life-giving
divine energy – will be replaced by a state of permanent
shov
, the overflowing
abundance of godliness. I present the two paradigms of this
everlasting future that
are discernable in Rashaz’s teachings: the future-to-come as the everlasting Sabbath,
and as the eighth day that is “entirely long and good”, which is connected to the
ritual of circumcision, and the abundance of God’s blessings related to this
commandment.
In the fourth chapter I discuss the temporal experience in everyday life of
Shneur Zalman’s followers. I concentrate on the rituals of prayer and Torah study (in
particular on the praxis of studying Torah at set times) as a means of transcending
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temporal limitations. Two aspects of these rituals are of particular interest. Firstly,
both rituals are time-bound: the times of prayer
are determined by Jewish law, and
the times for Torah study are set by the student. Secondly, the significance of the
ritual of setting times for Torah study in the doctrine of Rashaz tells us much about
his target audience and his idea of Hasidism in general. I unpack the various ways in
which he reinterpreted this seemingly minor halakhic precept in order to empower
and enrich the religious experience of middle-class businessmen, who were hardly as
spiritually and intellectually accomplished as the elite core of the Habad movement.
This chapter bridges the gap between Rashaz’s concepts of time and history on the
one hand, and the everyday experience of his followers on the other hand. It shows
how the emphasis he placed on the power of time-bound rituals to enhance the
spiritual experience of each and every one of his Hasidim helped turn Habad into a
broad-based movement without ever compromising its intellectual and spiritual
ideals.
The last chapter deals with the nexus of time and gender. It investigates some
hagiographical traditions about Rashaz’s
unique attitude toward women, in an
attempt to show that there is hardly any convincing evidence to show that he shared
the more inclusive attitude to women of the last two Lubavitcher Rebbes. I take as
my starting point the fact that Rashaz locates the source of time within the
sefirotic
tree in the feminine constellation of
Nukba.
I then discuss the functionality of
gender categories in Rashaz’s thought inasmuch as these categories relate to the
opposition of giver - recipient in the
sefirotic
structure. I analyse the
ma’amarim
in
which gender imagery is employed to depict the present
time of exile and the
envisioned future time of redemption, including those that feature the elevation of
the feminine aspect of the divine in the future-to-come. In relation to these, I attempt
to determine whether there is any correlation between the elevation of the cosmic
female and the status of flesh-and-blood women on earth. The correlation Rashaz
establishes between women and time thus helps determine his attitude to feminine
spirituality, for which I look closely at his attitude to the exemption of women from
the
time-bound commandments, and to the commandments generally considered
feminine, such as the lighting of the Sabbath candles.