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Sunday, 1 March 2026

544) Acculturating Alcohol and Sanctifying Psychedelics: It’s time to stand up


Introduction

Alcohol and drug abuse have long been perceived as problems external to the Jewish religious community. Currently, however, the rising visibility of alcohol consumption alongside drug and psychedelic practices, is closer to home than we may have imagined. According to psychologist Dan Wolf,[1] the difficulty lies in the fact that, whereas in the past, a range of methodologies were actively employed to counter alcohol and substance abuse, the prevailing attitude seems to be that quiet and moderate use is perhaps the most reasonable approach. Today, the issue of substances and psychedelics is no longer abstract or distant; it is reshaping the very fabric of our communal life, demanding recognition, response and a solid stance. 

Definitions

Psychedelics are drugs, but not narcotics. Narcotics depress consciousness while psychedelics alter consciousness by modifying perception, mood, and cognition. This altering of consciousness is often subjectively described by its practitioners as “conscious-expanding,” although this is not a pharmacological definition. Narcotics are effective painkillers but carry high risks of dependence and overdose. Psychedelics like psilocybin, LSD, and mescaline (from the peyote cactus)which act on the serotonin receptors in the brainare being studied for potential therapeutic benefits, but can also trigger adverse psychological reactions. 

We should not oppose the research

According to the late Dr Menachem Brayer, a professor and consultant psychologist at Yeshiva University (and also the father of the current Boyaner Rebbe and son of the previous one): 

“[w]e should not categorically oppose supervised experimentation with this [phenomena]” (Brayer 1968:33).[2] 

Masters and Houston vividly framed the dual potential of LSD: 

“LSD is exactly like atomic energy. It has enormous potential for good or evil. Right now we are just seeing the mental Hiroshimas” (Masters and Houston 1966).[3] 

Brayer acknowledges that there is scientific benefit to research into psychedelics, but also categorically warns of its dangers and particularly its incompatibility with Halachic Judaism when used in the popular environment: 

“[The] effects of the drug hallucinations may reappear weeks later under stress, and…a single dose is sufficient to cause permanent personality changes [including] homicidal or suicidal tendencies…a single ounce [of LSD] is enough of a dosage for 300,000 people” (Brayer 1968:31).  

Psychedelics and the claim of profound religious experiences

The effects of psychedelics are often conflated, by many in our communities, with deep “religious experience”: 

[I]ts adherents claim…the ability to expand consciousness, transport the user to primal dream-like conditions, increase depth-introspection and allow the experience of one's inner world. There is a sense of transcending time and space. In short, its effects seem to reproduce the experience of mystics” (Brayer 1968:32). 

Some users report that the psychedelic experience imparts beneficial character traits that can more easily be incorporated into the personality on return to normal consciousness, but in reality: 

“the only recurrent traits in the drug seem to be their negative effects” (Brayer 1968:36). 

Close to home

In recent conversations with rabbis across the spectrum, a striking pattern emerged. While most acknowledged that substance abuse and psychedelics are indeed a problem within our communities, very few were willing to speak against it openly. This reluctance is understandable: leaders employed by congregations are wary of jeopardising their positions or images of approachability. Yet what is more surprising is the tacit endorsement, in some quarters, of “quiet” and so-called “controlled” use of these substances. In certain cases, I even encountered instances where religious leaders themselves participated in such “controlled” consumption. 

More disturbing was the complete reframing of a glaring societal problem being misrepresented as a “neutral,” if not “clean” avenue of religious experientialism, in the same way as alcohol was used as a “farbrengen” tool, creating spiritual connections. I know for a fact that alcohol was even offered to a group of twelve-year-old girls as part of a school program. Alcohol fuels many, if not most of our communal activities and is sometimes also framed as pre-Shacharit preparations. Not to speak of Haftarah Clubs, where bottles of alcohol are consumed before Musaf. Some congregants literally have to be guided home after services. But drunkenness is never spirituality, nor is being “high” a lofty spiritual level. I have watched people being brought into religion through the bottle and then kept in religion with the same bottle. But spirituality must not be confused with the spirit in the bottle. 

The mind and the body make their own drugs, and all our experiences, religious and otherwise, can remain real and unaided by foreign substanceseven if it takes a little longer. If someone is not fit to drive, then I do not want to listen to their Torah, let alone their thoughts, or even partake in their conversations. Of course, many will counter by saying that drinking in “moderation” is perfectly fine. The problem is how one defines “moderation” because even after one sip, one isto whatever degreeunder its influence. The Beit Yosef writes: 

 "...inebriation is entirely prohibited, and there is no greater sin than drunkenness... [and it is] the cause of many sins" (Orach Chaim, 695).

To compound the problem, alcohol is no longer the only substance that keeps some people frum and fuels our societal structures, making it more pleasant to keep coming back to shul. Increasingly, other substances—from recreational drugs to psychedelics—are being introduced to the religious experience. Substances are now sometimes cast by respected members of our communities as “spiritual tools” enhancing perfect “clarity.” In practice, however, it is not uncommon for this to lead to violence and abusive behaviour. 

We hear that this is “cutting-edge research” with “all the professors” engaging in this activity (this, from religious people who don’t usually like or care what professors and academics say).[4] 

“Psychedelics are not drugs,” they tell us. But I have seen people under the influence of these substances, and I have, on occasion, been fearful for their lives as well as mine. 

Precedents in our literature and recent cultural memory

Unfortunately, some of our religious literature and culture elevates alcoholwine in this case—to having a “spiritual property.” This is an example of the “kosher gap” that many turn to for religious justification. A well-known publication attests to the holiness of wine: 

“[Physical things deteriorate] while the world of the spirit is eternal, and gets stronger with time. The one exception is wine. Wine, although it is also physical, has the spiritual property[!] of improving with age. It is wine that testifies that even the physical can be refined. Wine represents what Judaism is all about [!]: the fusing of the holy and the mundane, the spiritual and physical, the body and soul. What could be more holy than that?” (Can Wine be Holy, Chabad.org.). 

This is how Eli Wiesel recalls a Simchat Torah with the Lubavitcher Rebbe when he tried to keep up with the vodka drinking: 

"[A]t my first visit to the [the Rebbe's] court...I had informed him at the outset that I was a Chasid of Vishnitz, not Lubavitch, and that I had no intention of switching allegiance… 

He handed me a glass filled to the brim with vodka. 'Rebbe,' I said, 'in Vishnitz a chasid does not drink alone.' 'Nor in Lubavitch,' the Rebbe replied. He emptied his glass in one gulp. I followed suit. 'Is one enough in Vishnitz?' the Rebbe asked. 'In Vishnitz,' I said bravely, 'one is but a drop in the sea.' 'In Lubavitch as well.' He handed me a second glass and refilled his own. He said lechaim, I replied lechaim, and we emptied our glasses… 

But as I was unaccustomed to drink, I felt my head begin to spin. I was not sure where or who I was, nor why I had come to this place, why I had been drawn into this strange scene. My brain was on fire. 'In Lubavitch we do not stop midway,' the Rebbe said. 'We continue. And in Vishnitz?' 'In Vishnitz, too,' I said, 'we go all the way.' The Rebbe struck a solemn pose. He handed me a third glass and refilled his own. My hand trembled; his did not. 'You deserve a brocha,' he said, his face beaming with happiness. 'Name it.' I wasn't sure what to say. I was, in fact, in a stupor. 'Would you like me to bless you so you can begin again?' Drunk as I was, I appreciated his wisdom.... 'Yes, Rebbe,' I said. 'Give me your brocha.' He blessed me and downed his vodka. I swallowed mineand passed out" (All Rivers Run to the Sea, Elie Wiesel, 402-4). 

What's interesting about this account is that it shows that not only does one have to overcome the allure of alcohol for its own sake, but more importantly, in many Jewish circles, there is what sociologists call “cultural authority,which endorses and even coerces engagement in such activity. 

Then there are rabbis like the late Berel Wein, who understood that when alcohol is used, it is not long before other substances are also experimented with as well. The expression “shikkere goy” may indicate that drinking was not always dominant in Jewish circles: 

“There was a time not that long ago [when] Jews prided themselves on their sobriety and scorned their Eastern European non-Jewish neighbors because many of them were always drunk... A drunkard was never a hero or a role model in the Jewish world... All of that has changed dramatically in our time... 

The rate of alcoholism in the Jewish world is now at an all-time high, equal to if not even higher than the average in many countries. It is one of the many unseen or purposely ignored elephants that now appear in our room.   

Alcohol like drugs and tobacco is addictive. Therefore, alcoholism has to be defeated before it really takes hold. This can only be accomplished by a change in social society’s attitude towards drinking…” (Alcohol and the Jews, by R. Berel Wein). 

Recently, one of our local rabbis has banned the practice of the “sar hamashkim” (master of drink) to walk around pouring everyone a whisky. Another rabbi has banned alcohol entirely from his shul premises. 

What is most disturbing—particularly from a theological perspectiveis how widespread the incidence of substance abuse is in our religious community. I have heard all the “religious arguments” and “mystical motivations,” and read the articles which propose to show how substances can help where traditional therapy has failed. I am aware that more and more substances are becoming legal. But legality is not the point here. Why do individuals raised in religious households, who have received a yeshiva education and have been immersed in Torah study, still feel compelled to seek spiritual fulfilment in external substances. These are people have been through the religious systems, so we cannot blame the outside influences of newcomers or Baalei Teshuva. The first time in my life that I was offered drugs was in the “protective” environment of a yeshiva dormitory in New York. When I witness such practices, I always wonder what is wrong with Judaism that it needs to be enhanced by drink and substances. Obviously, they are not getting what they are looking for in their Judaism. 

In some circles, these trips into substance usage are promoted and disguised as part and parcel of the genuine Torah spiritual experience. The number of people I know who need to be “enhanced” is astounding—and growing—as hallucinogens are becoming the new and improved formulation of an “authentic” Jewish mysticism. 

According to licensed mental health practitioner and registered counsellor, Ariella Wolf: 

“In my years of therapeutic work, I often encounter clients who hold a genuine longing for meaning, authenticity and a deeper connection to G-d… It is often these clients who may then be drawn to psychedelic experiences. The ceremonies and rituals often woven into the “plant medicine journeys” can appear to offer them what they have been yearning for…engagement with something Divine.” 

One cannot help but notice the emergence of self-proclaimed “facilitators” and “practitioners,” who act like “nouveau Rebbes” who guide people through the “healing journey.” These figures often frame their paid services in the language of therapy, medicine, Jewish mysticism, and experiential spirituality. Their role is not merely to administer substances but to interpret the experience, offering meaning, ritual, and a sense of legitimacy. Substances have become authenticated and acculturated spiritual shortcuts and hardly anyone is speaking up against this. 

“[O]ur community should not fall in line with a culture that normalises the use of drugs and alcohol” (Dan Wolf). 

Observations

I have interviewed a number of people from our community, on the assurance of anonymity. These are some of the findings: 

Sometimes, even at a “safe” wedding, shul function or bar mitzvah celebration, guests are lured by respectable people within the community to whom many look up to, and they are taken outside, or to a corner, and introduced to new substances besides the ubiquitous alcohol. 

I asked a past student of mine how many of his classmateswho had all undergone post-school yeshiva training—were using psychedelics, and the response was: 80 per cent! 

Some communities have cakes at the kiddush which are known to contain certain substances. 

In some instances, pre-Shabbat gatherings are regularly organised on Friday afternoons, where bottles of alcohol are opened, and the lids are thrown away. Music is provided, but you must “bring your own mood enhancers,” and the participants arrive in shul (if they can) in a state of total inebriation. 

Underage children are quite savvy and somewhat experienced with various substances, and I am aware of some horrific stories with disastrous consequences which have taken place at seemingly innocent parties and other occasions. 

Nature hikes are often organised where substances are freely and openly available. Nay, even expected. These hikes and “nature gatherings” are attended by well-to-do and respectable people with children who play with our children. They even form part of our lift schemes.  I have been told that it is not unusual for 50 to 80 per cent of these participants to engage in such activities, and they come well prepared and stocked for the event. This then creates pressure for the others to join in and not be regarded as prudes. 

It is not unusual to see people coming to mincha on Shabbat afternoon so inebriated that they cannot participate in a shiur or even daven properly. It is not unusual for a husband to come home late from shul on Shabbat morning in such a state that his wife is embarrassed in front of the guests – or worse, is comfortable with the situation. 

On Shabbat, it is common for members of a certain community to use drops and oils in place of smoking mind-altering substances, which, of course, is forbidden on the holy day. 

I taught in religious schools for twenty-five years and sometimes, on auspicious occasions, alcohol was distributed to the teachers during recess (with liqueur provided for the women), who then went back to teaching their students. 

The problem is that, in the past, drinking in shul was usually the proclivity of the men, but now women also want to be inspired and uplifted like the men-folk. Today, gummies are often passed around the other side of the mechitzah as well, as substances become egalitarian. At a bar mitzvah celebration, one mother was not sure how she arrived or how she was going to get home to her family. In another case, someone was given substances at a shul Kiddush without being told what it was and ended up in the care of paramedics. 

You can even go to public talks where religious speakers will try to convince you that hallucinogens are an integral, de facto part of authentic Judaism, as if they were just another of the mitzvot Jews are required to do “to get close to Hakadosh Baruch Hu.” 

A new trend is now being peddled in our community where gummies are receiving kosher certification. This means that spiritual authority and religious endorsement are perceived as being extended to substances whose use is already framed as therapeutic or transcendent. 

I saw a communication from a widely recognised rabbi—someone whose inspirational video clips circulate globally each week—essentially endorsing the use of certain plant medicines, provided they are administered under the guidance of unspecified “skilled facilitators.” The troubling reality, however, is that in this field nearly everyone presents themselves as a self-proclaimed “specialist.” This tacit endorsement was despite the obvious vulnerability of the individual being advised, and the effect was to effectively grant a “hechsher” for embarking on such a “plant medicine journey.” 

Perhaps we are somewhat to blame for presenting an overemphasis on the immediate, experiential, cosmic, supernatural, mystical and messianic benefits of aspects of our faith. But then, when the sun rises the next day, and nothing changed, and the same vicissitudes are still there to challenge usa deep and pressing need emerges to fill the unfulfilled spiritual expectation, and many turn to substances to hasten the high. 

A contemporary source discusses (and advertises) the “Kabbalistic use of psychedelics: 

"Practices like breathwork, dancing, prayer, and the use of psychedelics can all help us change our states of awareness.... According to Kabbalah, the physical and spiritual worlds are inextricably linked; as in the proverb 'as above, so below,' what occurs in the material realm has an affect [sic] on the spiritual realm and vice versa... Psychedelics have the knowledge to work with our restricted awareness and open us back up because of their broad nature... They are our guide in the mystical travel through the Four Worlds. To buy shrooms… head over to... now" (And, by the way, its 30% off on the first order).  

Halachic perspectives

Dan Wolf points out that at a fairly recent Agudah convention, a question was put forward to highly influential Torah personalities: “What is the Torah perspective regarding smoking weed? Once something becomes legal, does that change how a Jew looks at it? 

R. Yosef Elefant expressed bewilderment that the Agudah convention required this issue to be addressed. He responded that Torah Jews must be directed by intellect, and when a person puts their intellectual functioning at risk, they are compromising what fundamentally defines them as human. By letting go of the reins that hold back the horse, we are not just letting go, but we are, in fact, denying the Godly Spark that exists within each one of us. He concluded by saying that this type of behaviour should not be justified or tolerated as a community. 

Professor Menachem M. Brayer argues that from a simple Halachic perspective, those who partake in these various drugs cannot reasonably claim their activity to be deeper expressions of Judaism, particularly of mystical Judaism, since, citing the psychologist and theologian Walter Pahnke: 

“[t]he phenomena of mystical experience may [also] occur outside the framework of any formal religion” (Pahnke 1967:68).[5]    

This is because the psychedelic experience often dissolves individuality into impersonal unity where the ego vanishes, rather than fostering a relationship between a real human being and the Divine. Brayer argues that the religious experience can only be from within the individual, not without. It is the fervour of the soul within, and it must take place within the real world. It cannot be a drug experience, nor an escape from reality. Well, it can, but it cannot be promoted as a uniquely “Jewish religious” or “deeply Jewish mystical” experience. 

Brayer shows that drug use conflicts with multiple Halachic frameworks. It places one in a space of ruach shtut (folly or hallucinatory state), which the Talmud says leads to negative consequences. It conflicts with the principle of hachovel be’atzmo (self-injury) as well as hachovel bechaveiro (injuring one’s fellows), particularly when husbands, wives and children are made to suffer the fallouts of the selfish high. It is not compatible with the principle of lifnei Iver (placing a stumbling block in front of the blind), especially when others are enticed to participate in the experience. This ties up with hezikah berabim (affecting a multitude of people with a dangerous and addictive craze). Furthermore, there is the overriding principle of chamira sakanta me’isura (a dangerous activity is more forbidden than a specific Torah prohibition). And certainly, there is the concept of venishmartem meod lenafshoteichem (taking extreme measures to ensure personal health). Maimonides repeatedly writes: 

"[H]ow dangerous it is to indulge in medicine, tranquilisers, sedatives or stimulants and becoming habituated to them" (Maimonides, Pirkei Mosheh, 8; see also Shemona Perakim, 1). 

Maimonides also teaches that the soul of the human is the sechel or intellect, and is the only entity to survive the human after death. Why would one want to alter or play dice with the mind?

R. Jacob Anatoli (c.1194–1256), celebrated for his translations of Arabic philosophical works into Hebrew, advanced the view that the Torah’s allowance of wine was a concession to the spiritual limitations of its early recipients. In his interpretation, wine was permitted not as an ideal religious medium, but as a temporary accommodation until humanity could cultivate more elevated forms of devotion, ultimately rendering wine unnecessary in religious life. This conception resonates with Maimonides’ well-known position regarding sacrifices: he argued that the sacrificial system was tolerated because the Israelites could not yet imagine religion without it. In both cases, the Torah is understood as meeting people where they were, while pointing toward a future in which more refined modes of worship would prevail. Accordingly, Maimonides maintained that in the messianic era, sacrificial rites would cease, and the Third Temple would embody a higher, non-sacrificial form of religious expression. This indicates that our turn to psychedelics after alcohol is move backwards in an opposing trajectory.

Conclusion

The paradox is painful: Instead of confronting the underlying hunger for meaning, we are offered transcendental shortcuts. The challenge is to ask deeper questions about authenticity and the meaning of Judaism. If Judaism requires chemical enhancement to remain compelling, then the problem is not only with the substances themselves, but with the structures of faith that have failed to nourish the soul without them. Yet ironically, the more mystical the communities are, the more vulnerable their members appear to be to practical “spiritual enhancement.” At that point, the alternative medicine creates an alternative Judaism. 

We are on the precipice of something far more precarious than most people realise. According to one active “practitioner” who spoke on condition of anonymity, “it’s already in every shul in in our city.” I hope this is a gross exaggeration.  One thing is certain: It's time to acknowledge what's going on in our community and stand up. It's time for religious leadership to urgently choose where they wish to position themselves because it’s too late to remain on the fence: Alcohol has already been acculturated and psychedelics are becoming sanctified. Its time to stand up.



[1] Dan Wolf, B.A. Hons, M.A., Psych (Wits). Registered Psychologist. Director Houghton House Group.

[2] Brayer, M.M., 1968, LSD: A Jewish View, Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought.

[3] Masters, R.E.L., and Houston, J., 1966, The Varieties of Psychedelic Experience, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York.

[4] More than one hundred years ago, based on the available medical information of that era, the Chafetz Chaim prohibited habitual cigarette smoking. The response was that most rabbis refused to regard its prohibition as absolute, and considered it instead as an advisory. It seems we are now in the same space regarding psychedelics. Things changed a little when it was later shown that smoking was indeed dangerous to our health, but to this day many observant people continue to smoke.

A century ago, within the European Jewish community, there was increased interest in the occult. Its practitioners also took pains to explain that their rituals were not superstition, but cutting-edge science. The Russian psycho-graphologist, Ilya Federovich Morgenstern, promised his followers that they would find self-knowledge at his séances, and he reminded them that without doubt all his practices were “firmly founded on science” (Glauber, S., 2024, ‘Advertising occultism in the Jewish press in Poland,’ Journal of Modern Jewish Studies, 7). 

[5] Pahnke, W. N., 1967, ‘LSD and Religious Experience’, in LSD, Man & Society, Edited by DeBold, R. &. Leaf, 60-85.

Sunday, 22 February 2026

543) Where are the first Chassidic texts?


Zemir Aritzim, published in 1772: Under the directive of the first Rebbe of Chabad, all existing copies of Zemir Aritzim were gathered and burned, leaving only two surviving copies. 

Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the groundbreaking research of Dr Elly Moseson[1]examines the obscure world of early Chassidic manuscripts that circulated well before the first printed, and official Chassidic book, Toledot Yaakov Yosef, in 1780. We explore the nature of the earliest Chassidic handwritten manuscripts, produced in the two decades between the passing of the Baal Shem Tov in 1760 and the publication of the first printed Chassidic book in 1780, before Chassidism became institutionalised. 

Sunday, 15 February 2026

542) Zoharic Kabbalah as mystical resistance to Christianity


 Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Hartley Lachter[1]examines how Medieval Kabbalists constructed a theology of resistance in response to negative Christian portrayals of (particularly) the male Jewish body, as flawed, inferior and weak. In response, the Kabbalists advanced a counter-narrative that framed Jewish bodies as sacred, resilient and transcendent of time. This Kabbalistic interpretation also allowed Jews to see themselves as instrumental in a redemptive history, turning accusations of faithlessness by rejecting Jesus into affirmations of faithfulness to divine mystery. They were no longer inferior, but through Kabbalah—indeed superior. 

Sunday, 8 February 2026

541) Romancing the Manuscript: The politics of knowledge in Chatam Sofer’s rejection of print.

Manuscript fragment of Toledot Yeshu
Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Maoz Kahana[1]—examines R. Moshe Schreiber (known as Chatam Sofer, 1762-1839) and his ambivalent stance toward the well-established print culture of Jewish books, which had flourished since its beginnings three centuries earlier in 1475. In place of embracing print as the dominant medium, he issued a striking call for a return to manuscripts. Chatam Sofer is a major rabbinic figure who “carries the aura of a founding figure in the sociological fabric of modern Judaism” (Kahana 2025:300). 

By privileging manuscripts, Chatam Sofer reinforced rabbinic control over textual transmission, resisting the democratisation of knowledge that print enabled. As opposed to mechanical printing, manuscripts circulated in smaller, more controlled circles, limiting exposure to the unorthodox ideas that sometimes sprouted from the Enlightenment movement (Haskalah), whichsignificantlyused print aggressively to promote its agenda. 

Sunday, 1 February 2026

540) Theo-politics of early rabbinic printing and the race for first publication


Levush haOrah by R. Mordechai Jaffe first published in 1603

Introduction

This articledrawing extensively on the research of Professor Eric Laweeexamines the publication of rabbinic texts during the Late Medieval and Early Modern Periods,[1] in the aftermath of the invention of the printing press around 1450. It focuses on the printing struggles of R. Mordechai Jaffe (c.1530–1612)—also known as the Levush, or Baal haLevushim—and especially on the personal reflections contained in the epilogue to his Levush haOra. 

The first Hebrew books were printed in Rome around 1470. Rabbinic books (sefarim) were not always selfless, intellectual and spiritual contributions for the edification of the People of Israel. The reality of rabbinic publishing was far more complicated. Publishing was not just about scholarship, but also about authority, the tension between tradition and innovation, and the practical challenges of getting a manuscript into print. It was about survival in a crowded marketplace of ideas, where every published gloss and commentary bore the promise of Chashivutlegitimacy, influence, power and authorityfor its author. But behind the finished published product sometimes lay a hidden world of rivalry, negotiation, polemics and politics. 

Sunday, 25 January 2026

539) The new Rebbe of Thieves

Resisei Laila given to me by R. Shlomo Carlebach

Introduction

I recently experienced a brief lapse back into my earlier self, when I was totally captivated by the romance of Chassidism, which included a diversion into the magnetism of R. Shlomo Carlebach, his music and teachings. I once asked R. Shlomo what I needed to do to become his Chassid. He smiled and said (typically), “But I want to be a Chassid of you!” I replied, “No, seriously...” He then told me to go to the Mikveh just before Shabbos and to read Resisei Leilah by R. Zadok haCohen. I went to the Mikveh, but I could never find a copy of Resisei Leilah. Years later, someone unexpectedly gave me a small parcel wrapped in brown paper. When I opened it, it was the well-used personal copy of Resisei Leilah that R. Shlomo carried around with him. Apparently, he met someone at the airport, heard they were going to South Africa and gave them his book to give to me. I was overwhelmed and felt like I was living in one of the Chassidic stories he used to tell. Years have passed, times have changed, and my interests and pursuits have moved on, but that little worn blue book remains one of my prized possessions. 

Sunday, 18 January 2026

538) Rules for writing a Sefer Torah: Rabbinic innovation or reflection of an existing scribal tradition?

Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Emanuel Tov, former Editor-in-Chief of the Dead Sea Scrolls Publication Project[1]—examines the rabbinic rules for writing a Sefer Torah. These laws are among the most detailed and revered in rabbinic literature. Every letter, margin, and column is prescribed with precision, creating the impression of a system wholly devised by the rabbis to safeguard the sanctity of the text. Yet the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls has complicated this picture. As Emanuel Tov has shown, many of these rabbinic instructions echo standard and common practices already in use among scribes in the Judean Desert centuries earlier. Thus, what previously may have seemed like a unique rabbinic innovation in scribal law now appears, at least in part, to be the codification of an existing scribal traditionif not a form of acculturation.[2] 

Sunday, 4 January 2026

537) When Did We All Start Ignoring the "Sealing of the Talmud"?


This post, by Boruch Clinton, originally appeared on the B'chol D'rachecha site.

It’s popularly understood that the completion of the Talmud around 1,500 years ago marked a critical transition in halachic history. From that point on, halachic conclusions found in the Talmud were binding on all Jews everywhere and for all time.

Sunday, 28 December 2025

536) ‘Halachic Fiction’ and ex post facto justification in the modern Halachic process

Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Marc Shapiro examines the term ‘Halachic fiction.’ It is used to describe legal constructs in Halacha (Jewish law) that are not literally true, but serve as mechanisms to reconcile the demands of Halacha with the realities of lived experience. In other words, there is a category of Halacha—popular during the post Shulchan Aruch period (from the sixteenth century to this day)—where the “community’s ritual instinct” (Halbertal 2002:166, citing Jacob Katz), as well as custom, determine the law, sometimes to a greater extent than the rabbis.   

Sunday, 21 December 2025

535) Suspending Judaism between depth and accessibility: Maimonides and Yeshaya of Trani

Piskei haRid and Piskei haRiaz. Rid (grandfather) and Riaz (grandson) published together in one volume, although their worldviews were very different.

Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Marc Shapiro[1]—asks whether the Italian commentator and Talmudist, R. Yeshaya di Trani (known as Riaz) had a larger influence on future Judaism than Maimonides. Riaz was one of the rabbis who vigorously opposed Maimonides during the Maimonidean Controversies that consumed the rabbinic world in the centuries after Maimonides’ passing in 1204. It seems that the rabbis were not ready for the radical expansiveness of Maimonidean thought, and under the leadership of Riaz—the great antiMaimonidean polemicist—refused to allow Judaism to be subjected to philosophical creed or inquiry. Maimonides’ towering philosophical system threatened to redefine Judaism as a religion of creed and rational inquiry. Not all rabbis were prepared to accept this radical shift, and Riaz emerged as one of the most forceful voices of resistance, rejecting the binding nature of Maimonides’ Thirteen Principles of Faith as well as his rationalism. Instead, he argued for a simpler, unsophisticated and non-dogmatic faith based solely on Halachic observance. 

Sunday, 14 December 2025

534) Between Law and Magic: The Mezuzah as a test case in shifting cosmologies


Introduction

This article—drawing extensively on the research of Professor Oded Yisraeli—examines references to the mezuzah from both before and after the emergence of the Zohar in the late thirteenth century, in order to trace shifting cosmologies. To map these changing approaches, we shall examine successive periods of Jewish literature from the third century to our times, each marked by distinct emphases and developments in the evolving mystical cosmology of the mezuzah. 

Sunday, 7 December 2025

533) The Seven Laws of Noah: Then and now

 

Jan Jansson's Duo Tituli Thalmudici Sanhedrin et Maccoth (Amsterdam, 1629)

Introduction

This articlebased extensively on the research by Yaacov Amar Rothsteinidentifies two distinct layers in the development of the Seven Laws of Noah, comprising an early rabbinic conception, and a later reinterpretation. In the Talmud and classical rabbinic sources, the Sheva Mitzvot Bnei Noach were not envisioned as a comprehensive universal religion for non‑Jews, but rather as a minimal legal frameworka baseline of obligations incumbent upon humanity with clear consequences for their violation. The difference between these two layers of perception is immense. The modern idea of a Noahide religion, presented as the original biblical faith intended for all non‑Jews, does not originate in rabbinic tradition. Surprisingly, it first emerged within Medieval Christian polemics and Early Modern[1] European thought. It was only as recently as about one hundred and fifty years ago that this universalist reading was taken up within Jewish discourse, most notably by R. Elia Benamozegh (d.1900), and later expanded upon by contemporary figures such as the Lubavitcher Rebbe and R. Adin Steinsaltz. [See: Kotzk Blog: 523) Radical rabbinic models of universalism and Kotzk Blog: 522) Italian letters: The battle over the Zohar].