
The zaddik is an
individual of extraordinary spiritual gifts whose devekut (the Hasidic
objective of cleaving of the soul to God in worship) is nevertheless dependent
on the congregation that gathers around him. His special task is to raise the
souls of his followers toward the divine light, which means that he must at
times step down from his own spiritual level to that of the common people [a
concept known as yeridah letzorekh aliyah
"descent for the sake of ascent"].
The zaddik's duties
include pleading to God for the people, involving himself in their daily cares
and anxieties, counseling them, and strengthening their faith. Thus the relation
between Hasidic zaddik and his hasidim is much more intimate and personal
than that of the professional kehillah [community] rabbi [a paid position
in the town government limited to those found qualified by other rabbis]: The
zaddik was the "rebbe" (a more affectionate Yiddish
term) rather than "rov" (the more dignified scholarly title).
The concept of the zaddik
was, however, quite authoritarian. For the ordinary hasid, faith in God meant
faith in the miraculous powers of the individual zaddik who was his intercessor
and protector in the higher worlds. Hasidic interpretation of the bibilical
statement that "the righteous man is the foundation of the world"
(Prov. 10:25) was that the zaddik acted as the channel through which
divine grace flows down and the ladder by which the individual's soul rises
up. Devekut meant cleaving to the zaddik
in order to cleave to God. Never before in rabbinic Judaism did unquestioning
loyalty to the person of the religious leader become, to such an extent, such
a prerequisite for salvation.
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From:
Seltzer, Robert M. Jewish People, Jewish Thought. Copyright ©
1980 by Robert M. Seltzer (New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.), pp. 494-5.
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