Sefer Hasidim

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Sefer Hasidim
Chassidei Ashkenaz
GenreNon-fiction
Media typePrint

The Sefer Hasidim or Sefer Chassidim (

Elazar Rokeach.[2]

Contents

The book contains ethical, ascetic, and mystical teachings, intermingled with elements of German popular belief. It discusses ethics and how they relate to everyday Jewish life, dealing with a variety of topics including piety (heading, Shemuel; so-called Sefer HaYir'ah); (§§ 14–26), reward and punishment, penitence, the hereafter, etc. (heading, Sefer HaḤasidim; so-called Sefer Teshuvah); (§§ 27–489), authorship of the book, pride, the hereafter and retribution, penitence and sinful desires, fasting and fast-days, suspicion, public mortification, martyrdom, etc. (heading, Zeh Sefer ha-Ḥasidim); (§§ 490–638), the Sabbath; (§§ 639–746), tefillin, ẓiẓit, mezuzot, books; (§§ 747–856), the study of the Law; (§§ 857–929), charity; (§§ 930–970), reverence for parents; (§§ 971–1386), piety, worship of God, prayer, visiting the sick, etc.; (§§ 1387–1426), excommunication and oaths; the final paragraphs repeat and amplify upon matter previously discussed.

This text takes into consideration the specific circumstances of these ethical situations including the individual character qualities of the subject, historical and economic context, and the subjects relationship to other people, making it an extremely important text when it comes to everyday Jewish life in medieval Germany. It serves as a guide for how to handle life's common tasks and challenges. There is no other ethical Hebrew text that covers as many topics while retaining close attention to realistic detail as Sefer Hasidim. Sefer Hasidim even served as a final authority on the way of Jewish life for the for authors of Halakah after the 15th century.

It consists, according to the edition of Basel, of 1,172 paragraphs; according to the last edition, of 1,903. Chosen parts have been translated into German by Zunz.[3] The Book of the Pious is an exceedingly rich source for the Kulturgeschichte of the Jews in the Middle Ages.[4]

Authorship and history

Sefer Hasidim is not a uniform work, nor is it the product of one author. It appears that Judah HaHasid most likely was not the sole author of the Sefer Hasidim.[5] It has been said that Samuel he-Ḥasid is the author of the first 26 sections.[6] In its present form the book contains, according to Güdemann, three revisions of the same original work,[7] of which Judah is undoubtedly the author; and both the contents and language of the book indicate that it originated in Germany. Important additions were made also by Judah's pupil Eleazar Roḳeaḥ,[8] for which reason the authorship of the whole work has sometimes been ascribed to him. On account of the fact that collectors and copyists used varying recensions, sometimes the same passage occurs two or three times in different parts of the Sefer Ḥasidim. Some fragments of other books are inserted.[9] This Hebrew book originated between the late 12th and early 13th centuries in the

medieval Europe and beyond.[10]

The book has been printed many times since 1538.[11]

According to Ivan Marcus, no original text of the Sefer Hasidim ever existed.[12] It is therefore no surprise, then, that thirty-seven manuscripts that include texts from the Sefer Hasidim have been identified.[13] Seventeen of these manuscripts are available online.[14] Some manuscripts are more extensive than others. Two versions of the book are best known: one printed in Bologna and another that was found in Parma. An edition by Jehuda Wistinetzki based on the most complete source, the Parma manuscript, was published by the Mekitzei Nirdamim Society in 1891 and reprinted in 1955. Recently Otzar haPoskim Institute has published an elaborate version with numerous commentaries.

Some studies address subjects included within Sefer Hasidim. These include the subject of Jewish travel,

Shulkhan Arukh) as frivolity and a distraction from the Torah.[18]

Commentaries on Sefer Hasidim

References

  1. .
  2. ^ "Sefer Hasidim". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  3. ^ Zunz, Z. G. pp. 135–142; comp. Zunz, Literaturgesch. p. 299; Grätz, Gesch. vi. 215
  4. ^ see Berliner, Aus dem Inneren Leben; Abrahams, Jewish Life in the Middle Ages
  5. S2CID 254600980
    .
  6. ^ see ed. Wistinetzki, p. 490, note; Epstein, l.c. p. 94
  7. ^ Güdemann, Erziehungswesen, Vienna, 1880, p. 281, note iv.
  8. ^ see Epstein, l.c. p. 93
  9. R. Nissim
    's Megillat Setarim
  10. ^ "Sefer Hasidim". Princeton University. Retrieved 6 February 2013.
  11. ^ Bologna, 1538; Basel, 1580, and often reprinted; see Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. col. 1320; published according to De Rossi MS. No. 1133 [which contains many variant readings and represents an older text] in Meḳiẓe Nirdamim collection by Judah Wistinetzki, Berlin, 1891-93
  12. .
  13. .
  14. ^ "Princeton University Sefer Hasidim Database (PUSHD)". etc.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  15. S2CID 254598534
    .
  16. .
  17. .
  18. ^ Veildlinger, Jeffrey (2009). Jewish Public Culture in the Late Russian Empire. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 2.

External links