Everything about Maharal Of Prague totally explained
Judah Lew ben Bezalel ("Judah Loewe son of Bezalel", also written as
Yehudah ben Bezalel Levai [or
Loewe,
Löwe],
1525 – Wednesday
7 September 1609 (
Julian, 17th
Gregorian) or 18
Elul 5369 according to the
Hebrew calendar) was an important
Talmudic scholar,
Jewish mystic, and philosopher who served as a leading
rabbi in
Prague (now in the
Czech Republic) for most of his life. He is buried at the
Old Jewish Cemetery, Prague in
Josefov, and his grave with its tombstone intact, can still be visited.
He is widely known to scholars of
Judaism as the
Maharal of Prague, or simply as the
Maharal (מהר"ל -
MaHaRaL is the
Hebrew acronym of
Moreinu ha-Rav Loew, "Our Teacher the Rabbi Loew"). His descendants'
surnames include
Loewy and
Lowy.
Within the world of
Torah and Talmudic scholarship, he's known for his works on
Jewish philosophy and
Jewish mysticism and his
supercommentary on
Rashi's Torah commentary known as
Gur Aryeh al HaTorah.
The Maharal is particularly known for the story about the
golem, a myth that first appears in print close to 200 years after his death. According to the myth he supposedly created using mystical magical powers based on the esoteric knowledge of how
God created
Adam, but there's no contemporary evidence that this is true.
According to the legend, he did this to defend the
Jews of the Prague
Ghetto from
antisemitic attacks against them; particularly false
blood libels emanating from certain prejudiced quarters.
Biography
The Maharal was probably born in
Poznań lists the birth town (in error and 1526 He received his formal education in various
yeshivas (Talmudical schools).
He was independently wealthy, probably as a result of his father's successful business enterprises. He accepted a rabbinical position in
1553 as
Landesrabbiner of
Moravia at
Mikulov (
Nikolsburg), directing community affairs but also determining which tractate of the
Talmud was to be studied in the communities in that province. He also revised the community statutes on the election and taxation process. Although he retired from Moravia in
1588 at age 60, the communities still considered him an authority long after that.
One of his activities in Moravia was the rallying against slanderous slurs on legitimacy (
Nadler) that were spread in the community against certain families and could ruin the finding of a marriage partner (known as
shidduchim within
Orthodox Judaism) for the children of those families. This phenomenon even affected his own family. He used one of the two yearly grand sermons (between
Rosh Hashanah and
Yom Kippur 1583) to denounce the phenomenon.
He moved back to Prague in 1588, where he again accepted a rabbinical position, replacing the retired Isaac Hayoth. He immediately reiterated his views on
Nadler. On
23 February 1592, he'd an audience with
Emperor Rudolf II, which he attended together with his brother Sinai and his son-in-law Isaac Cohen; Prince Bertier was present with the emperor. The conversation seems to have been related to
Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) a subject which held much fascination for the emperor.
In 1592, the Maharal moved to
Posen, where he'd been elected as
Chief Rabbi of
Poland. In Posen he composed
Netivoth Olam and part of
Derech Chaim (see below). Towards the end of his life he moved back to Prague, where he died in
1609. He is buried there; his tomb is a famous tourist attraction.
His name
His name "Löw" or "Loew", derived from the German
Löwe, "
lion" (cf. the
Yiddish Leib of the same origin), is a
kinnuy or substitute name for the Hebrew
Judah or
Yehuda, as this name - originally of the
tribe of Judah - is traditionally associated with a lion. In the
Book of Genesis, the patriarch
Jacob refers to his son Judah as a
Gur Aryeh, a "Young Lion" (Genesis 49:9) when blessing him
(External Link
). In Jewish naming tradition the Hebrew name and the substitute name are often combined as a pair, as in this case. The
Maharal's classic work on the
Rashi commentary of the
Pentateuch is called the
Gur Aryeh al HaTorah, in
Hebrew: "Young Lion [commenting] upon the
Torah". The Maharal's tomb in Prague is decorated with a heraldic shield with a lion with two intertwined tails (
queue fourchee), alluding both to his first name and to
Bohemia, the arms of which has a two-tailed lion.
Influence
Disciples
It is unknown how many Talmudic rabbinical scholars the Maharal taught in Moravia, but the main disciples from the Prague period include Rabbis
Yom Tov Lipmann Heller and
David Ganz. The former promoted his teacher's program of regular
Mishnah study by the masses, and composed his
Tosefoth Yom Tov (a Mishnah commentary incorporated into almost all published editions of the Mishnah over the past few hundred years) with this goal in mind. David Ganz died young, but produced the work
Tzemach David, a work of Jewish and general history, as well as writing on
astronomy; both the MaHaRal and Ganz were in contact with
Tycho Brahe, the famous astronomer.
Jewish philosophy
In the words of a modern writer, the Maharal "prevented the Balkanization of Jewish thought" (Adlerstein 2000, citing Rabbi
Nachman Bulman).
His works inspired the Polish branch of
Hasidism, as well as a more recent wave of
Torah scholars originating from
Lithuania and
Latvia, most markedly Rabbi
Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler (1892-1953) as well as Rabbi
Abraham Isaac Kook (1864-1935). A recent authority who had roots in both traditions was Rabbi
Isaac Hutner (1906-1980). Rabbi Hutner succinctly defined the
ethos of the Maharal's teachings as being
Nistar BeLashon Nigleh, meaning (in
Hebrew): "The
Hidden in the
language of the
Revealed". As a mark of his devotion to the ways of the Maharal, Rabbi Hutner bestowed the name of the Maharal's key work the
Gur Aryeh upon a branch of the yeshiva he headed when he established its
kollel (a
yeshiva for post-graduate Talmud scholars) which then became a division of the
Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin in New York during the
1950s, known as
Kollel Gur Aryeh. Both of these institutions, and the graduates they produce, continue to emphasize the serious teachings of the Maharal. Rabbi Hutner in turn also maintained that Rabbi
Samson Raphael Hirsch (1808-1888) (
Germany,
19th century) must also have been influenced by the Maharal's ideas basing his seemingly
rationalistic Weltanschauung on the more abstract and abstruse teachings of the hard-to-understand Jewish Kabbalah.
Rabbi Judah Loew wasn't a champion of the open study of
Kabbalah as such, and none of his works are in any way
openly devoted to it. According to him, only the greatest of Torah scholars are able to discern his true original inspirations and the intellectual framework for his ideas in their complex entirety. Nevertheless, Kabbalistic ideas permeate his writings in a rational and philosophic tone. His main Kabbalistic influences appear to have been the
Zohar and
Sefer Yetzirah, as
Lurianic Kabbalah hadn't by that time reached Europe.
Although he couldn't reconcile himself to the investigations of
Azariah di Rossi, he diffused the tension between the
Aggada (narrative, non-legal parts of the Talmud) and rationalism by his allegorical interpretations of difficult passages. He was entirely in favor of scientific research in so far as the latter didn't contradict divine revelation, all the while insisting on finding deep meaning in all the contributions of Talmudic teachers.
Literature
The legend of his creation of a
golem inspired
Gustav Meyrink's
1915 novel
Der Golem. Various other books have been inspired by this legend, the authenticity of which has been doubted; although the Golem motif is old, the connection between the Golem on the one hand and the Maharal and Prague on the other is known only from ca. 1840. Maharal is featured in the book
He, She and It and the
Dutch work
De Procedure ("The Procedure",
Harry Mulisch,
1999), both retellings of the Golem legend. A poem by
Jorge Luis Borges, entitled
El Golem also tells the story of Judah Loew (Judá León) and his giving birth to the Golem. In that poem, Borges quotes the works of German Jewish philosopher
Gershom Scholem.
"The Maharal" by Yaakov Dovid Shulman (in English) questions if the stories
about the golem are true. Even a
Caldecott Medal winner (
Golem by
David Wisniewski) mentions Loew as Rabbi Loew. The fictional book
Iron Council by
China Miéville has a character named Judah Low who creates golems.
Bibliography
- Gur Aryeh ("Young Lion", see above), a supercommentary on Rashi's Pentateuch commentary
- Netivoth Olam ("Pathways of the World"), a work of ethics
- Tif'ereth Yisrael ("The Glory of Israel"), philosophical exposition on the Torah, intended for the holiday of Shavuoth
- Gevuroth Hashem ("God's Might[yActs]"), for the holiday of Passover
- Netzach Yisrael ("The Eternity of Israel"; Netzach "eternity", has the same root as the word for victory), on Tisha B'Av (an annual day of mourning about the destruction of the Temples and the Jewish exile) and the final deliverance
- Ner Mitzvah ("The Candle of the Commandment"), on Hanukkah
- Or Chadash ("A New Light"), on Purim
- Derech Chaim ("Way of Life"), a commentary on the Mishnah tractate Avoth
- Be'er ha-Golah ("The Well of the Diaspora"), an apologetic work on the Talmud, mainly responding to interpretations by the Italian scholar Azariah di Rossi (min ha-Adumim)
- Chiddushei Aggadot ("Novellae on the Aggada", the narrative portions of the Talmud), discovered in the 20th century
- Derashot (collected "Sermons")
- Divrei Negidim ("Words of Rectors"), a commentary on the Seder of Pesach, published by a descendant
- Various other works, such as his responsa and works on the Jewish Sabbath and the holidays of Sukkot, Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, have not been preserved.
His works on the holidays bear titles that were inspired by the Biblical verse in
I Chronicles 29:11: "Yours, O Lord, are the greatness, and the might, and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty, for all that's in the heavens and on the earth [isYours]; Yours is the kingdom and [Youare He] Who is exalted over everything as the Leader." The book of "greatness" (
gedula) on the Sabbath wasn't preserved, but the book of "power" (
gevurah) is
Gevurath Hashem, the book of glory is
Tif'ereth Yisrael, and the book of "eternity" or "victory" (
netzach) is
Netzach Yisrael.
Articles and Books
Byron L. Sherwin, Mystical Theology and Social Dissent: The Life and Works of Judah Loew of Prague (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1982)
Rivka Schatz, “Maharal’s Conception of Law- Antithesis to Natural Law” Jewish Law Annual Vol. VI.
Rivka Schatz, “Existence and Eschatology in the Teachings of the Maharal” Immanuel 14 (Spring 1982) 66-97; Immanuel 15 (Winter 1982-3) 62-72.
Moshe Zuriel "Numbers: Their meaning and Symbolism According to Maharal" [Hebrew] HaMaayan 18:3 (1978) 14-23; 18:4 (1978) 30-41, reprinted in Sefer Ozrot Gedolei Yisroel (Jerusalem:2000) volume 1, pp. 204-228.
Martin Buber, "The Beginning of the National Idea" On Zion: The History of an Idea. (New York, Schocken Books, 1973).
Otto Dov Kulka, "The Historical Background of the National and Educational Teachings of the Maharal of Prague" [Hebrew] Zion 50 (1985) 277-320.
Benjamin Gross, Netzah Yisrael (Tel Aviv: Devir, 1974)
Mordechai Breuer, “The Maharal of Prague’s Disputation with Christians: A Reappraisal of Be’er Ha-Golah” in Tarbiz (1986) 253-260
Adlerstein Y. Be'er Hagolah: The Classic Defense of Rabbinic Judaism Through the Profundity of the Aggadah. New York, NY: Mesorah Publications, 2000. ISBN 1-57819-463-6.
Aharon Kleinberger, The Educational Theory of the Maharal of Prague [Hebrew] (Magnes: 1962).
Andre Neher, Jewish Thought and the Scientific Revolution: David Gans (1541-1613) and his times (Oxford-New York: Littman Library, 1986)
Neher, Faust et le Maharal de Prague: le Mythe et le Reel (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1987);
Neher, Le Puits de l'Exil: la Theologie Dialectique du Maharal de Prague (Paris: A. Michel, 1996)
Neher, Mishnato shel ha-Maharal mi-Prague, Reʾuven Mass,c2003.
Gross, Benjamin, Yehi Or (Reʾuven Mass, 1995).
Gross, Benjamin, Netsah Yiśraʾel Tel Aviv : Devir, 1974.Further Information
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