Ba'alei Shem
Chabad tradition describes a chain of hidden tzaddikim known as Ba'alei Shem — Masters of the [Divine] Name — who transmitted an inner tradition of Kabbalistic secrets from generation to generation, until Chassidus was revealed openly by Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem Tov.
This chain,[1] preserved through centuries of concealment, was the hidden preparation for the public flowering of Chassidus. Each of the four Ba'alei Shem — Eliyahu Baal Shem, Yoel Baal Shem, Adam Baal Shem, and the Baal Shem Tov — was renowned in his own right for his righteousness and deeds. But their deeper historical significance lies in what they formed together: a golden, unbroken chain that paved the way for the revelation of the Torah's inner dimension — first through the general Chassidic path opened by the holy Baal Shem Tov and continued by the Maggid of Mezeritch, and later through Chabad Chassidus, which is, in the words of Chabad teaching, "none other than the Torah of the Baal Shem Tov itself."
The Four Ba'alei Shem edit
R' Eliyahu Baal Shem[2] edit
R' Eliyahu was born in Kraków, Poland.[3] In 1590 he settled in Worms, where he established a yeshiva for the study of Kabbalah and became known as a Baal Shem. In 1621 he founded a fellowship of hidden tzaddikim, and roughly three years later moved to Prague, where he continued his work until his passing at the age of over 118 years.[4]
R' Yoel Baal Shem[5] edit
Rabbi Yoel Halperin of Zamość — known as Rabbi Yoel Baal Shem — was the foremost disciple of R' Eliyahu, the leader of the second generation of the hidden fellowship, and the teacher of Rabbi Adam Baal Shem, who in turn taught the Baal Shem Tov. During his leadership, the hidden tzaddikim renewed an ancient method of drawing simple people closer to Torah and mitzvos through the stories and legends of the Torah,[6] kindling the spark within their souls.
R' Yoel arrived at R' Eliyahu's yeshiva as a young, unmarried man, and in 1634 was admitted to the hidden fellowship. In 1639 he returned to Zamość in Poland[7] and was there crowned as a Baal Shem, leading the yeshiva for some fifty years. R' Yoel became widely known in the Jewish world not only for the wonders he performed but above all for his many accomplishments — especially in spreading Torah. Among other things, he opened a yeshiva in Zamość distinguished by serious study of both the revealed (nigleh) and esoteric (nistar) dimensions of Torah. In the realm of revealed Torah, R' Yoel followed the approach of his teacher Rabbi Yoel Sirkis[8] — a method grounded in deep, logical engagement with each passage to understand it on its own terms.
R' Adam Baal Shem edit
Rabbi Adam Baal Shem of Ropshitz — his full name was Adam Nachum — was a great Kabbalist, the leader of the hidden tzaddikim in the generation preceding the open revelation of Chassidus, the disciple of R' Yoel Baal Shem, and the teacher of the Baal Shem Tov.[9]
He arrived at R' Yoel's yeshiva at around the age of 33,[10] and around the year 1489 assumed leadership of the hidden fellowship.[11] R' Adam served as rabbi and head of the rabbinical court in several communities: first in the city of Lutsk, where he also served as head of the Council of Sages of the Council of Four Lands; then in Pinsk; and in 1692 he was appointed to Ostrog, after the previous rabbi, R' Naftali HaKohen, moved to Posen. In 1734, R' Adam Baal Shem stepped down from the leadership of the hidden fellowship and transferred it to Rabbi Yisrael Baal Shem Tov. Near the end of his life he was elected as head of the rabbinical court in Lviv to fill the seat of the Gaon R' Naftali Hirtz — but on 4 Tishrei 1714 he passed away before taking up the position. He is buried in Ostrog, Ukraine.
R' Yisrael Baal Shem Tov edit
The Baal Shem Tov was the disciple and spiritual successor of R' Adam Baal Shem — first as head of the hidden fellowship of tzaddikim, and then as the founder and originator of the Chassidic movement and its teachings, from which all Chassidic courts and dynasties would eventually branch and develop. The Baal Shem Tov was born on 18 Elul 5458 (August 24, 1698), passed away on 6 Sivan 5520 (the first day of Shavuos), and is buried in the town of Mezhybizh.
See Also edit
Notes edit
- ↑ Described primarily in the Sefer HaZikhronos (Book of Remembrances) of the Frierdiker Rebbe.
- ↑ Sefer HaZikhronos, chapters 55, 96, 135–137.
- ↑ His year of birth is unknown, as is his whereabouts between 1550, when he left Kraków, and 1590, when he suddenly appeared in Worms, Germany.
- ↑ This detail appears in Sefer HaZikhronos, vol. 2, p. 133, ch. 91, which records: "When R' Shmuel passed away, R' Eliyahu was one hundred and eight years old" — almost certainly a printing error for one hundred and eighteen. The text continues to relate that when it was necessary to visit the grave of the Maharal to invoke his memory regarding a burial plot he had set aside for his grandson, R' Eliyahu sent ten of his students to remind the Maharal of his promise to his grandson R' Shmuel — and himself attended the funeral and delivered a eulogy.
- ↑ Sefer HaZikhronos, chapters 60, 75, 93.
- ↑ Likkutei Dibburim, vol. 3, p. 550.
- ↑ At his master's direction.
- ↑ Better known by the acronym the Bach (Bayis Chadash), the title of his major work on the Tur.
- ↑ R' Adam Baal Shem is mentioned many times in the Sefer HaZikhronos (chapters 51–52, 60, 74–79, and 99, 107), but almost always in narrative contexts without specific dates — and the details of his life remain largely shrouded in obscurity.
- ↑ Sefer HaZikhronos, ch. 75.
- ↑ This estimate is based on the preceding paragraph's account that R' Yoel led the yeshiva from 1639 for approximately fifty years.