Nachman of Breslov#Teachings

{{Short description|Hasidic rabbi (1772–1810)}}

{{distinguish|text= Nachmanides, a 13th-century sage}}

{{Infobox rebbe

|title =Breslover Rebbe

|image= Rabbi Nahman Tomb (Uman, Ukraine).JPG

|caption =

|birth_name =Nachman of Breslov

|main_work =Likutey Moharan

|predecessor =

|successor =

|dynasty =Breslov

|father =Simcha

|mother =Feiga

|spouse =Sashia, daughter of Rabbi Ephraim of OssatinHis first wedding had to be at thirteen as was the custom in the period he lived

| children =Adil
Sarah
Feiga
Chaya
Miriam
daughter (died in infancy)
Yaakov
Shlomo Ephraim

|birth_date =4 April 1772 (Rosh Chodesh Nisan 5532)

|birth_place=Międzybóż, Kingdom of Poland

|death_date=16 October 1810 (18 Tishrei 5571)

|death_place=Uman, Kiev Governorate, Russian Empire

|date of burial=17 October 1810 (19 Tishrei 5571)

|place of burial=Uman, Ukraine

|}}

Nachman of Breslov ({{langx|he|רַבִּי נַחְמָן מִבְּרֶסְלֶב}} Rabbī Naḥmān mīBreslev), also known as Rabbi Nachman of Breslev, Rabbi Nachman miBreslev, Reb Nachman of Bratslav, Reb Nachman Breslover ({{langx|yi|רבי נחמן ברעסלאווער}} Rebe Nakhmen Breslover), and Nachman from Uman (April 4, 1772 – October 16, 1810), was the founder of the Breslov Hasidic movement. He was particularly known for his creative parables,Solomon Grayzel, A History of the Jews, The Jewish Publication Society of America, Philadelphia, 1968, p. 533: "Nachman of Bratslav, possessed a remarkable gift for telling stories and parables which became the spiritual heritage of all Israel" drawing on Eastern European folktales to infuse his teaching with deeply kabbalistic yet universally accessible remedies, pieces of advice, and parabolic stories. He emphasized finding and expressing one’s uniqueness while steering away from despair in a world he saw as becoming more and more uniform. Through Martin Buber's translation, his teaching is thought to have influenced some 20th-century writers, including Franz Kafka.https://yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Nahman_of_Bratslav: "to help redeem the fantasy life of his disciples (and himself) from domination by evil, Naḥman in 1806 began to tell fantastic stories, derived from East European folkloric motifs but interwoven with intimations of kabbalistic symbols and suffused with an air of mythic reality. The most important of these stories were published after his death as Sipure ma‘asiyot (1815), in a Hebrew and Yiddish bilingual edition. Historians of modern Jewish literature in both languages have regarded them as important literary compositions... Through Martin Buber’s adaptive translation (1906), it is likely that they influenced Franz Kafka and other modern writers."

Rabbi Nachman, a great-grandson of the Baal Shem Tov, revived the Hasidic movement by combining the Kabbalah with in-depth Torah scholarship. He attracted thousands of followers during his lifetime, and his influence continues today in Breslover Hasidism and non-Hasidic movements.{{cite web |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/984972.html|title=Singing a different tune|last=Shragai |first=Nadav|date=3 November 2008|work=Haaretz|access-date=10 December 2010}} Rabbi Nachman's religious philosophy revolved around closeness to God, speaking to God in normal conversation "as you would with a best friend", and being happy. The concept of hitbodedut was central to his thinking.

Biography

{{See also|Baal Shem Tov family tree}}

Nachman was born on April 4, 1772 (Rosh Chodesh Nisan), into a family of central figures in Hasidism in the town then known as Międzybóż in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, now Medzhybizh, Ukraine. Initially, he declined to take on his family's tradition of leading Hasidism.Green- Nahman of Bratslav- Encyclopedia of Religion

Nachman's mother, Feiga, was the daughter of Adil (also spelled Udel), daughter of the Baal Shem Tov. His father Simcha was the son of a Baal Shem Tov disciple for whom Nachman was named: Nachman of Horodenka (Gorodenka), who was a seventh-generation lineal descendant of Judah Loew ben Bezalel.{{cite web|url=http://www.mytzadik.com/index.asp?lid=6&page=tzadik&kid=98&t=רבי|website=mytzadik.com|language=he|script-title=he:רבי נחמן מהורודנקא|trans-title=Rabbi Nachman of Horodenka|access-date=Aug 16, 2016}}{{Dead link|date=August 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Nachman had two brothers, Yechiel Zvi and Yisroel Mes, and a sister, Perel.Until the Mashiach, p. 2.

At 13, he married Sashia, daughter of Rabbi Ephraim, and moved to his father-in-law's home in Ossatin. He acquired his first disciple on his wedding day—a young man named Shimon, who was several years older than him.Until the Mashiach, p. 7.

During 1798–1799, he traveled from Ukraine to the land of Israel, where he visited Hasidim living in Haifa, Tiberias, and Safed. He arrived in Galilee right before Napoleon’s battle with the Turks. This journey, which he saw as a private rite of passage, was often looked back on as a source of inspiration for him. In Tiberias, his influence brought about a reconciliation between the Lithuanian and Volhynian Hasidim.Rabbi Nachman's Wisdom: His Pilgrimage to the Land of Israel #19. On his return from Israel, he was ready to assume the mantle of leadership in Hasidism, which he did in a highly selective manner. In his early years of leadership, he made each disciple confess all of his sins to him, as well as participate in a daily hour-long conversation with God.

Shortly before Rosh Hashana 1800, Nachman moved to the town of Zlatopol.

=Moves to Bratslav and Uman=

File:Bratsalv.jpg]]

In 1802, Nachman moved to the town of Bratslav, also known as "Breslov" and "Bracław".Tzaddik #12.

His move to the town of Breslov brought him into contact with Nathan Sternhartz, a 22-year-old Torah scholar in the nearby town of Nemirov.{{citation needed|date=March 2013}} Sternhartz recorded all of Nachman's formal lessons as well as transcribing his work Likutey Moharan.{{citation needed|date=March 2013}} After Nachman's death, Sternhartz recorded informal conversations he and other disciples had had with Nachman, whose works he published with his own commentaries on them.{{Citation needed|date=December 2012}}

Nachman and his wife Sashia had six daughters and two sons. Two daughters died in infancy, and the two sons both died within a year and a half of their births. Around the birth of his first son, Shlomo Efraim, in 1805, a messianic awakening occurred in the circle surrounding Nachman. He began to speak of the coming of the Messiah, who would embody both the Messiah son of David and the Messiah son of Joseph in a single figure (possibly alluding to his son, whose name includes both son of David and son of Joseph). In 1806, Shlomo Efraim passed away, an event that caused a major crisis among the Breslov Hasidim and led to a decline in messianic expectations.{{Cite book |last=Mark |first=Zvi |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/468965711 |title=The scroll of secrets: the hidden messianic vision of R. Nachman of Breslav |last2=Moses |first2=Naftali |date=2010 |publisher=Academic Studies Press |isbn=978-1-934843-93-2 |series=Reference library of Jewish intellectual history |location=Brighton, MA |pages=121–158 |oclc=468965711}} Their surviving children were Adil, Sarah,[https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/311491 In August 2021, Sarah's grave was desecrated with pig Bones (Israel National News)] Miriam, and Chayah.Until the Mashiach, pp. 330-341. Sashia died of tuberculosis in June 1807,Until the Mashiach, p. 140. and the following month, Nachman became engaged to a woman named Trachtenberg. Right after the engagement, Nachman contracted tuberculosis.Until the Mashiach, pp. 143-144.

In 1810, after a fire destroyed Nachman's home, a group of maskilim (Jews belonging to the Jewish enlightenment movement) living in Uman invited him to live in their town and provided housing for him as his illness worsened.Tzaddik #114. However, this was not the sole impetus for his relocation to Uman. In 1768, the Massacre of Uman took place, resulting in the brutal deaths of thousands of Jews, who were subsequently interred in a mass grave. Rabbi Nachman chose to move to this site with the intention of aiding in the spiritual redemption of the departed souls. As Arthur Green wrote: "Nachman [...] decided upon Uman as a home in order to work with the poor souls of those martyred Jews—and in order to be buried among them when his own time came to die".{{Cite book |last=Green |first=Arthur |title=Tormented master: the life and spiritual quest of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav |date=1992 |publisher=Jewish Lights Pub |isbn=978-1-879045-11-8 |series=A Jewish Lights classic reprint |location=Woodstock, Vt |pages=252}}

Nachman died of tuberculosis at the age of 38 in the early autumn on the fourth day of Sukkot 1810 and was buried in the local Jewish cemetery.Until the Mashiach, pp. 204-206.

Image:Rabbi Nahman Tomb (Uman, Ukraine).JPG

Based on the frequent fluctuations and changes in Nachman's mood, scholars have suggested that he suffered from severe depressionArthur Green, בעל הייסורים: פרשת חייו של ר' נחמן מברסלב, Afekim Library, Am Oved Publishing, pp. 79, 91, 163–164, 172, 175.Joseph G. Weiss, מחקרים בחסידות ברסלב, Bialik Institute, Jerusalem, p. 164 and from bipolar disorder.H. Daum and A. Hartman, נפש יהודית, Israel 2017, pp. 235-236Ada Rapoport-Albert's article "קטנות, פשיטות ואיני יודע" which appears in her book "חסידים ושבתאים, אנשים ונשים", page 122

Pilgrimage tradition

File:Nahmantomb.JPG where Nachman is buried]]

{{main|Rosh Hashana kibbutz}}

After Nachman's death Sternhartz instituted an annual pilgrimage to his gravesite on Rosh Hashana, called the Rosh Hashana kibbutz, which drew thousands of Hasidim until 1917, when the October Revolution forced it to continue clandestinely. Only a dozen or so Hasidim risked making the annual pilgrimage during the Communist era. During Perestroika in the Soviet Union in 1989, the gates were reopened. In 2008, approximately 25,000 people from all over the world participated in this annual pilgrimage.[http://jta.org/news/article/2008/10/02/110639/umanroshhashana "Hasidic Jews celebrate holiday in Uman"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100514065924/http://jta.org/news/article/2008/10/02/110639/umanroshhashana|date=2010-05-14}} Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 2008-10-02. Retrieved 31 July 2009.

Teachings

Nachman rejected the idea of hereditary Hasidic dynasties and taught that each Hasid must "search for the tzaddik ('saintly/righteous person')" for and within themself. He believed that every Jew had the potential to become a tzaddik.Rabbi Nachman's Wisdom #26. He emphasized that a tzaddik should magnify God’s blessings on the community through their performance of mitzvot. However, a tzaddik cannot absolve a Hasid of their sins; the Hasid should pray only to God, not to the Rebbe of the time. Confiding in others unburdens the soul as part of repentance and healing.{{non sequitur|date=November 2024}}

In his early life, he stressed the practice of fasting and self-castigation as the most effective means of repentance.{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} In later years, however, he abandoned severe asceticism because he felt it might lead to depression and sadness. He told his followers not to be "fanatics". Instead, they should choose one personal mitzvah to be very strict about and do the others with a healthy amount of care.Rabbi Nachman's Wisdom #235.

He encouraged his disciples to take every opportunity to increase holiness in themselves and their daily activities. For example, by marrying and living with one's spouse according to Torah law, one elevates sexual intimacy to an act bespeaking honor and respect to the God-given powers of procreation. He urged everyone to seek out their own and others' good points in order to approach life in a state of continual happiness. He stressed living with faith, simplicity, and joy. He encouraged his followers to clap, sing, and dance during or after their prayers to bring them closer to God. He taught his followers to spend an hour alone daily, talking aloud to God in their own words, as if "talking to a good friend". This is in addition to the prayers in the siddur. Breslover Hasidism still follows this practice today, which is known as hitbodedut (literally, "to make oneself be in solitude"). Nachman taught that the best place to do hitbodedut was in a field or forest among the natural works of God's creation. He emphasized the importance of music for spiritual development and religious practice.AZAMRA!

Likutey Moharan I, 282 [http://www.breslov.co.il/image/users/251935/ftp/my_files/Azamra%20from%20the%20book.pdf?id=12892890] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131001093309/http://www.breslov.co.il/image/users/251935/ftp/my_files/Azamra%20from%20the%20book.pdf?id=12892890|date=2013-10-01}}. Cf. Nigun.

Controversy

In 1816, Joseph Perl wrote a denunciation of Hasidic mysticism and beliefs, in which he criticized many of the writings of Nachman, who had died six years earlier. Austrian imperial censors blocked publication of Perl's treatise, fearing that it would foment unrest among the empire's Jewish subjects.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}

During his lifetime Nachman also encountered opposition within the Hasidic movement itself from people who questioned his new approach. Eventually nearly the entire Jewish population of Zlatopil opposed Nachman, leading him to relocate to Breslov in 1802.Kaplan, Aryeh. Until The Mashiach; Rabbi Nachman's Biography: An Annotated Chronology. (Breslov Research Institute, no location listed, 1985), pp. 60-62. (Kaplan cites Chayay Moharan 27b #11 and #114.) The same story is referenced also in Kramer, Chaim. Through Fire and Water: The Life of Reb Noson of Breslov. (Breslov Research Institute, New York/Jerusalem, no date listed), pp. 31-32.

Nachman believed at one time that he was the Messiah,Paul Kriwaczek, Yiddish Civilisation, Vintage Books, (a division of Random House), © 2005, p. 263: "Nachman of Bratslav, was for a time convinced that he had been chosen as the Messiah." and should be recognized as such.https://www.haaretz.com/2007-04-27/ty-article/messiah-in-all-but-name/0000017f-f3f6-d487-abff-f3fe8c610000: "Rabbi Nachman's personal messianic pretensions emerge loud and clear from various remarks attributed to him in his lifetime... Rabbi Nachman regarded himself as having all the necessary qualifications to be the Messiah. What kept him from fulfilling his messianic potential was a lack of recognition."

Published works

{{wikisource|Author:Nachman of Breslov}}

Reb Nachman's Torah lessons and stories were published and disseminated mainly after his death by his disciple, Reb Nathan of Breslov:

  • Likutey Moharan ("Collected Teachings of Our Teacher, Rabbi Nachman") (vol. i., Ostrog, 1808; vol. ii., Moghilev, 1811; vol. iii., Ostrog, 1815)—Hasidic interpretations of the Tanakh, Talmud and Midrashim, Zohar, etc. This work has been completely translated to English and annotated in fifteen volumes by Rabbis Chaim Kramer and Moshe Mykoff of the Breslov Research Institute.{{Cite web |title=Likutei Moharan |url=https://www.sefaria.org/Likutei_Moharan?tab=contents |access-date=2024-12-25 |website=www.sefaria.org}}
  • Sefer HaMidotRabí Najmán de Breslov EL LIBRO DEL ALEF-BET Sefer HaMidot (El Libro de los Atributos) - Rabí Najmán de Breslov. El Libro del Alef-Bet (Sefer HaMidot - Versión Completa): Aforismos del Rebe Najmán sobre la Vida Espiritual Breslov Research Institute, Jerusalem/New York 2017 (The Aleph-Bet Book) (Moghilev, 1821)—a collection of practical advice gleaned from Torah sources, presented as epigrams or maxims and arranged alphabetically by topic.Sears, Dovid (2010). Breslov Pirkey Avot. Jerusalem:Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|978-1-928822-16-5}}. p. 36.
  • Tikkun HaKlali ("General Remedy")—Reb Nachman's order of ten Psalms to be recited for various problems, plus commentary by Reb Noson. Published as a separate book in 1821.
  • Sippurei Ma'asiyot (Tales of Rabbi Nachman or Rabbi Nachman's Stories) (n.p., 1816)—13 story tales in Yiddish and then translated in to Hebrew and that are filled with deep mystical secrets. The longest of these tales is The Seven Beggars,{{cite web |url=http://www.shuvubonim.org/storysb.html|title=The Story of the Seven Beggars, by Rabbi Nachman of Breslov |publisher=Yeshivat Shuvu Bonim |access-date=10 December 2010|year=2000}} which contains many kabbalistic themes and hidden allusions. Several fragmentary stories are also included in Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan's translation of the complete tales, Rabbi Nachman's Stories.{{Cite book |last=Kaplan |first=Aryeh |title=Rabbi Nachman's Stories |publisher=Breslov Research Inst |year=1985 |isbn=978-0930213022}}
  • Sichot HaRan ("Talks of Rabbi Nachman"): Compilation of the central teachings of Rabbi Nachman, comprising 308 "sichas", mainly presented as anecdotes, concerning Hassidic philosophy and the Service of God, and providing background and remarks re earlier teachings.See the Hebrew article: :He: שיחות הר"ן Originally an appendix to Sippurei Ma'asiyot.

Another mysterious document that Reb Nachman dictated to Reb Nathan is the Megillat Setarim ("Hidden Scroll"), which was written in a cryptic combination of Hebrew initials and brief phrases. Prof. Zvi Mark has researched and attempted to decipher this document, based on disclosures from prominent members of the Breslov community. His findings have been published in Hebrew and in English translation, along with facsimiles of discrepant manuscript copies.{{Cite book |last=Mark |first=Zvi |title=The scroll of secrets: the hidden messianic vision of R. Nachman of Breslav |last2=Moses |first2=Naftali |date=2010 |publisher=Academic Studies Press |isbn=978-1-934843-94-9 |series=Reference library of Jewish intellectual history |location=Brighton, MA}}

Destroyed writings

Nachman also wrote but then destroyed Sefer HaGanuz ("The Hidden Book") and the Sefer HaNisraf ("The Burned Book"). He told his disciples that these volumes contained deep mystical insights that few would be able to comprehend. He dictated the Sefer HaNisraf to Sternhartz, who said that he did not understand it at all and that "What I do remember is that it spoke about the greatness of the mitzvah of hospitality and preparing the bed for a guest".Siach Sarfei Kodesh I-699, quoted in Through Fire and Water, p. 144. Nachman never showed the Sefer HaGanuz to anyone, and in 1808 he burned all the copies of the Sefer HaGanuz and the Sefer Ha-nisraf.Tzaddik #66.

Nachman first ordered the two manuscripts of the book Sefer HaNisraf to be destroyed in a bargain for his life during a phase of his tuberculosis which preceded his death by two years.{{cite book|last=Greenbaum|first=Avraham|title=Tzaddik|year=1987|publisher=Breslov Research Institute|location=New York/Jerusalem|isbn=0-930213-17-3|page=77}} He believed that the illness was a "punishment from the upper-world--for writing a book".{{cite book|last=Kamenetz|first=Rodger|title=Burnt Books|year=2010|publisher=Nextbook/Schocken|location=New York|isbn=9780805242577|page=79}}

Two years later, from his deathbed, he ordered a chest full of his writings to be burnt. On the evening of the last day of his life, Rabbi Nachman gave his disciples the key to a chest. "As soon as I am dead," he told them, "while my body is still lying here on the floor, you are to take all the writings you find in the chest and burn them. And be sure to fulfill my request."

Quotes

  • "It is a great mitzvah to be happy always."Likutey Moharan II, 24.
  • "If you believe that you can damage, then believe that you can fix."Likutey Moharan II, 112.
  • "Gevalt!!! Never give up hope! There is no despair.""Likutey Moharan" II, 78.
  • "When a person realizes that he is on a very low level and far from God, this itself is a reason to feel encouraged. Before this, he was so far from God that he did not even know it. Now at least he knows it, and this itself is a sign that he is drawing closer.""Likutei Moharan" II, 68.
  • "Worldly desires are like sunbeams in a dark room. They seem solid until you try to grasp one."Sichot HaRan #6.
  • "It is very good to pour out your heart to God as you would to a true, good friend."Kochavey Ohr, Anshey Moharan #4.
  • "You are never given an obstacle you cannot overcome."Likutey Moharan II, 46.
  • "The essence of wisdom is to realize how far from wisdom you are."Likutey Moharan II, 83.
  • "All the sages of Israel are in my estimation like a garlic peel."[http://he.wikisource.org/wiki/%D7%97%D7%99%D7%99_%D7%9E%D7%95%D7%94%D7%A8%22%D7%9F_%D7%A8%D7%A6 Chayey Moharan 290].
  • "Wherever I go, I'm always going to Israel."{{cite web |url=http://www.aish.com/jl/h/cc/48960356.html|title=Crash Course in Jewish History #62: Return to the Land of Israel |last=Spero|first=Ken|date=26 January 2002 |access-date=10 December 2010 |publisher=aish.com}}
  • "Know that [when] a person needs to cross a very, very narrow bridge, the general principle and main point is not to make oneself at all terrified."Likutey Moharan Part II, 48:2. This saying, adapted as "The whole world is a narrow bridge, but the main thing is not to be at all afraid", has been set to music in Hebrew as the song "Kol Ha'Olam Kulo" (MIDI: [http://www.greatjewishmusic.com/Midifiles/Kol_HaOlam.htm]) (MP3: [http://www.aish.com/shabbatsongs/shabbatsongsdefault/-Kol_Haolam_Kulo-_-_Jewish_Courage.asp] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060825162412/http://www.aish.com/shabbatsongs/shabbatsongsdefault/-Kol_Haolam_Kulo-_-_Jewish_Courage.asp|date=2006-08-25}})

See also

References

{{reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • Green, Arthur (1992). Tormented Master: The Life and Spiritual Quest of Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav. Jewish Lights Publishing. {{ISBN|1-879045-11-7}}
  • Greenbaum, Avraham (1987). Tzaddik: A Portrait of Rabbi Nachman. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|0-930213-17-3}}
  • Kaplan, Aryeh (1973). Rabbi Nachman's Wisdom. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute.
  • Kaplan, Aryeh (2005). The Seven Beggars: & Other Kabbalistic Tales of Reb Nachman of Breslov (Nahman, Nachman). Woodstock, VT: Jewish Lights Publications for the Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|1-58023-250-7}}
  • Kaplan, Aryeh (1985). Until the Mashiach: The Life of Rabbi Nachman. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute.
  • Kramer, Chaim (1989). Crossing the Narrow Bridge. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|0-930213-40-8}}
  • Kramer, Chaim (1992). Through Fire and Water: The Life of Reb Noson of Breslov. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|0-930213-44-0}}.
  • Levine, Rabbi Menachem Article on Aish: https://aish.com/uman-what-you-need-to-know-about-the-city-of-souls/
  • Mark, zvi, (2010). The scroll of secrets: the hidden messianic vision of R. Nachman of Breslav. Academic Studies Press. {{ISBN|978-1-934843-94-9}}.
  • Mark, zvi, (2015). The Revealed and Hidden Writings of Rabbi Nachman of Bratslav: His Worlds of Revelation and Rectification. De Gruyter Oldenbourg. {{ISBN|978-3110407716}}
  • Mykoff, Moshe (2003). 7th Heaven. Woodstock: Jewish Lights Publishing, with the Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|1-58023-175-6}}
  • Sears, Dovid (2010). Breslov Pirkey Avot. Jerusalem: Breslov Research Institute. {{ISBN|978-1-928822-16-5}}.
  • Dynes, Ofer (2024), "How to Read Naḥman of Bratslav's Tales in Their Historical Context." https://muse.jhu.edu/article/951922