The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (960 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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asidim
(Heb., ‘righteous’). Those described in Bible, especially Psalms, as close to God; the term was then used by the
rabbis
to describe those leading particularly holy lives.
asidim, Sefer
(Heb., ‘Book of the Pious’). Medieval German Jewish book of ethics. The
Sefer
asidim
, comprises the ethical lore of the
asidei Ashkenaz
movement.
Hasidism
(Heb.,
asidut
). Jewish religious movement which emerged in the late 18th cent. Hasidism first arose in S. Poland and Lithuania, with such charismatic leaders as
Israel b. Eliezer
(Ba‘al Shem Tov, the Besht),
Dov Baer
of Mezhirech and Jacob Joseph of Polonnoye. These leaders drew groups of disciples around them, characterized by popular traditions of ecstasy, mass enthusiasm, and intense devotion to the leader, the
Zaddik
. Hasidic groups travelled as far as
Erez Israel
, and hasidic centres were to be found throughout E. Europe. With the great waves of immigration of the 1880s, Hasidism spread to the USA.
Initially there was considerable opposition to the movement from such figures as
Elijah b. Solomon Zalman
, the Vilna Gaon. Early Hasidism was thought by opponents to be tainted with
Shabbateanism
and Frankism (see
FRANK, JACOB
). Its mystical enthusiasm was also thought to detract from the sober study of
Torah
. However, by the mid-19th cent., despite the different practices and rituals of the movement, the
Orthodox
acknowledged Hasidism as a legitimate branch of Judaism.
Hasidic social life is centred on the court of the
zaddik
who is seen as the source of all spiritual illumination (e.g.
devekut
). Stories of past and present zaddikim are circulated as part of the mythology of the group. As in the root source,
abad
, worship is characterized by joy, and is expressed in song and dance as well as prayer. A major goal is the individual
bittul ha-yesh
(the annihilation of selfhood) in which the worshipper is absorbed into the divine light. The best-known modern expositor of Hasidism is Martin
Buber
whose
Tales of Rabbi Nachman
(Eng. 1962),
Tales of the Hasidim
(1947–8), and
Legend of the Baal Shem
(Eng. 1969) interpreted the movement in the light of existentialism.

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