
Ba'al Shem
Tov (c. 1700-1760, born in Poland), founder of the Hasidism, the Jewish spiritual
movement, was born Israel ben Eliezer. He is commonly known as the Besht,
the acronym for Ba'al Shem Tov, or Master of the Good Name. He and
his disciples employed the story or anecdote to inspire their followers with
the love of God and man. They succeeded in implanting faith and confidence,
righteous and hope, joy and gaiety in the hearts of despondent and poverty-stricken
Jews throughout Eastern Europe.
In his early
years, the Besht retired to the Carpathian Mountain to engage in mystical
contemplation, meanwhile eking out his living as a lime digger. During this
period he earned a reputation as a healer, or ba'al shem, who worked
wonders by means of herbs, talismans, and amulets inscribed with the divine
name. He later became an innkeeper and a ritual slaughterer and, about 1736,
settled in the village of Medzhibozh, in Podolia. From this time until his
death, he devoted himself almost entirely to spiritual pursuits.
Though the
Besht gained no special renown as a scholar or preacher during his lifetime,
he made a deep impression on his fellow Jews by going to the marketplace to
converse with simple people and by dressing like them. Such conduct by a holy
man was fiercely condemned by some, but the Besht defended his actions as
a necessary "descent for the sake of ascent," a concept that eventually
evolved into a socio-theological theory that placed great value on the role
of the spiritual mentor.
When the
Besht renounced the strict asceticism practiced by his companions, he had
in fact taken the first step toward initiating a new religious movement within
Judaism. His teachings centered on three main points: communion with God;
service in ordinary bodily existence the notion
that every human act done "for the sake of heaven" was equal in
value to observing formal commandments; and rescue of the "sparks"
of divinity that, according to the kabbalah (mystical teachings), were
trapped in the material world. His assurance that redemption could be attained
without retreat from the material world found a ready response among his listeners,
the common Jewish folk in Poland and Lithuania. The Besht and his followers
were fiercely attacked by rabbinical leaders for "dancing, drinking,
and making merry all their lives"; they were called licentious, indifferent,
and contemptuous of tradition.
Many of the
Besht's outstanding pupils preserved their master's teachings in their writings,
embellishing his image with numerous tales and legends.
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