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There seems no standardized way to cite the Zohar in references. For example, I have no idea what "(Zohar iii, 288b)" means. Where exactly is this text?! The Zohar is a big book. I have several editions of the Zohar from various publishers - in Aramaic, Hebrew, as well as English - online and hardcopy - and none of them are indexed in the way above. Each publication seems to organize the Zohar text according to its own method. Some simply give each section its own name without using any numbering system at all. Obviously citing the Zohar with page numbers is useless because different editions have different page numbers, and online editions often have no page numbers at all. Probably Ashlag's Sulam (in Hebrew) with section names and section numbers should be the standardized method for citing the Zohar. It would be helpful if the Wiki article included a table with the equivalent referencing method of each publication. User:Haldrik 6:42, 1 Aug 2006 (UTC)
I have a beef. The entry on choseness states "This view of Jews as superior to non-Jews later resurfaced in a part of the Zohar, the classic book of Kabbalah (Jewish esoteric mysticism), and this view has been repeated in a few later Hasidic texts such as the Tanya. " But the entry on Zohar says nothing about these contraversial sections.
Yes you misunderstand, my beef is with the inconsistency between the Choseness and Zohar entries. The Choseness entry says that the view of Jews as superior to non-jews surfaced in a part of the Zohar. Why does the entry on Zohar say nothing specific of this?
Binyamin Writes:
Chosenness comes from the Torah itself. The words are "am segula" In Hebrew "Segol" means purple which is a royal colour and it is also the name for the vowel with three dots. The concept of the trinity in creation is the people of Israel, the land of Israel, and the Torah.
The chosenness of Israel is not because they are better or more intelligent. The chosenness is a task. What is the nation of Israel chosen for? The torah writes clearly "to be a holy people unto me"
Ishmael (now Islaam) inherited an aspect of Abraham's initial mission. The spreading of monotheisism. But they did not inherit the land of Israel and the Torah. This is the "Segola". Being holy is setting an example. It is separating oneself and attaining complete perfection and connection to God. This is the chosenness of Israel. Through their efforts, work, and connection to God they will attain perfection and be an example to all the other nations. Chosenness is thus a very high responsiblility and not "betterness".
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Chosen_People"
About 15 years ago, Artscroll published a book called "The Rishonim", by Rabbi Hirsch Goldwurm. In his entry on Moses De Leon, he briefly mentions how Moses claimed to come across the Zohar and how it contradicted some of his own philisophical works. However, due to limited resources, I cannot pursue this topic. I would like to ask the Wikipedia community to pick up on this topic.
More publishing information can problably found on their website.
And what about the zohar in Xenosaga Episode I: Der Wille zur Macht
Thanks. --Arithmomaniac38 June 28, 2005 23:27 (UTC)
85.64.76.154 (talk · contribs) has been campaigning hotly to have this article deleted. However, his arguments seem more to indicate that he/she feels there is an NPOV issue here.
The anon feels there is a lack of objective tone, no discussion about whether the legalistic material in the Zohar is legally binding, and too limited coverage on the various rates of acceptance within orthodox Judaism.
Some points:
I would recommend to 85.64.76.154 that small edits with a good edit summary will probably not cause a stir, and larger edits need discussing here. JFW | T@lk 17:00, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
This is perhaps not the best place to ask this question, but could anyone comment on the Kabbalah Center translation in the External Links? I'm sort of torn between "Wow! what a wonderful thing" and trepidation about the quality considering who is responsible for it. That I can find on the site there is no indication who did the translation. Was it by a reputable scholar or some Kabbalah Center nut case? < Puck 04:47, 21 December 2005 (UTC)
Well, I am not exactly an expert in Zoharic Aramaic (i.e. I am far from it) but the translation of the Hebrew is odd too...They translate "Shoshana" as Lily.....its actually a Rose.....I believe a Lily is Chavatzeleth.....I would get a different translation....especially for the finer points....
In modern Hebrew, שושנה means "rose". However in Biblical Hebrew, it means "lily". Haldrik 09:41, 27 February 2006 (UTC)
Presumably this word, "Shoshana" is where the King James Edition gets the phrase "Rose of Sharon" in its translation of the Song of Songs. Interestingly, think how different we would view the Christian message if we had got "Consider the Roses of the Field" rather than "Consider the Lilies of the Field" (although I know the NT was written in Koine Greek!). I assume the Lily, like the Rose to Europeans and the Lotus to Indians, Chinese etc was conisdered a Sacred Flower to the Jews. ThePeg 11:54, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
Hey. I'd added a link to the Kabbalah Center's Zohar translation in the links a while ago, and I recently found out that you have to sign up with the organization to read their free translation. Should the link stay up, or should it be taken down? Sean 0000001 (talk) 04:09, 13 September 2012 (UTC)
On the subject of External links, I removed https://archive.org/details/ZoharCompleteEnglishTranslation because it appeared that the file no longer is hosted. Is there any other alternative for a complete English translation of the Zohar? Also I would like to renew calls for appropriate, standardised or trusted versions of the English translation of the Zohar and call into question the Kabbalah Center's versions. Jamesniederle (talk) 11:16, 9 May 2019 (UTC)
A really interesting article but there's a bit missing it seems... The article breaks off at one point to quote a description of the ecstatic state of a Kaballist achieving union with God but the extract doesn't seem to be there. Could it be reinstated? ThePeg 11:51, 7 January 2007 (UTC)
I would add that this article is very dated and somewhat misinformed. There are several layers within and after Scholem. For example, Scholem's student, Isaiah Tishby, also thought the Zohar was the work of Moshe de Leon but he also added the earliest refutation was back in the early 13th century. Yehuda Liebes (another descendent of scholem, et al) has an amazing work from 15 years ago that demonstrates an alternative, and more probable origin for the work in a 'circle' of Kabbalists whom he identifies in detail. Furthermore, I really don't see the necessity to speak of the Christian Kabbalists here, but Liebes does have a very interesting article in the same book on Christianity in the Zohar ... if that is not too sensitive a subject.
I am now adding material on historical academic views of the Zohar's origins. Alternate views, both academic historical and traditional rabbinic, would also be appropriate. Would anyone care to add the views of Modern Orthodox rabbis, or of current day scholars like Moshe Idel? Mark3 15:24, 14 January 2007 (UTC)
I have added specific sources for all the new material entered yesterday and today. These sources also support most of what aleady is in the article. More sourcing would be welcome. Mark3
There is no source that the Zohar was just accepted over time. Actually to say it somehow mystically was accepted over some time while you see major opposition to it in every generation is very illogical. While it is mostly kept hidden to the public almost all historians will tell you on the Sabbatai Zvi incident that along with it came the mainstream acceptance of the Zohar and obviously Luraic Kabbalah. Which answers the question why virtually all of the kabbalistic schools are Luraic in basis. This isn't original research. You can hear it plain out by Elisheva Carlebach in her lecture on the subject which can be found on the Sephardic Institutes' website. Or ask your LOHR (local orthodox historian rabbi). 203.206.248.147 18:52, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
Below I've copied some arguments that motivated the deletion attempt, for the reason that they seem important to this discussion, and the suspicion that they have not been completely settled yet: --AVM 15:30, 7 March 2007 (UTC)
1. - Partial acceptance: (portions of the work may be old and midrashic but not written by rabbi Shimon ben Yohai) 2. - Some may may have been written by him, and some was not. 3. - All was written by him 4. - None was written by him
I simply do not understand. If wikipedia purports to be an encyclopedia, then it simply cannot feature articles of such poor research. There is little to no understanding of the academic work on the zohar, such as that by Scholem, Tishby, Liebes, Wolfson, etc. It's really shameful. As with many articles featured here on Judaism, there is little historical research or understanding. The article is filled with anachronistic definitions and criteria (for instance, the shoddy lay-out of how current Jewish movements consider the authorship of the Zohar). The article has a clear bias towards Orthodoxy, and a poor understanding of the shape of the Jewish world today. Can someone please come in and give this article a complete overhaul? It is next to useless.
The aticle of Menachem Mendel Kasher hereDaat is I think of tremendous importance. His points are: 1.Comparison bet. Zohar and De Leon's other works show major differences. 2. Scholem out of 1700 pages containing millions of words finds exactly two words that seem to be "modern". well 999,998 out of a milion ain't bad. (especially as said words are mentioned in the geonic works and final redaction on many midrashim was in the Geonic period.) 3. Possibilty of the Zohar's terminology stemmming from ancient Syriac 4. points to an old manuscript in which many "new" words are formed from acronyms, numerical codes (gematryo) and the like. 5. It's quite common that notes written on the side of a manuscript found their way into the main text. "the author of the Zohar drew upon the Bible commentaries written by medieval Jewish rabbis" can be explained like this. 6. Reuvain Margolies points to many halachos in Maimonides that could only have come from a text similar to the Zohar.
This I have from a quick skim of the article. Is it worth making a breakoff article of criticism and defense of Zohar or a seperate section? I've focused on the philogical difficulties but I'm also aware of refutations to the other problems. This article (and many others on wikipedia) draws a good deal from the Jewish Encyclopedia, being as that is a Reform publication, I find that there are definite POV problems with articles based on it. I will await suggestions before editingWolf2191 04:19, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
It's worth mentioning that there isn't a reputable halachic authority that does not accept the Zohar. This includes R Yosef Karo, the Marshal, R' Moshe Isserles (I've seen his commentary on Zohar), The Gr"a, the Mishna Berura, the Aruch Ha"shulchan. Re: Halacha and the Zohar Maharshal states that if the Zohar doesn't contradict Halcha we follow the Zohar (this is the accepted Halacha). I will try to find the exact responsa if desired. Wolf2191 04:42, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
I edited a major addition to the authenticity of the Zohar section. It may be worth placing the authenticity issue in a seperate page.Wolf2191 02:32, 13 April 2007 (UTC)
That addition about the Shulchan Arukh Harav is odd because it isn't reflected in his halachic work AFAIK. Wolf2191 01:37, 6 May 2007 (UTC)
"The only objection considered by the believers in the authenticity of the Zohar was the lack of references to the work in Jewish literature; and to this they answered that Shimon ben Yochai did not commit his teachings to writing, but transmitted them orally to his disciples, who in turn confided them to their disciples, and these to their successors, until finally the doctrines were embodied in the Zohar"
This is biased. It makes believers in Cabal sound awfully naive (see below for Kasher' refute) will edit such sentences.
Kasher's criticism of Scholem hardly proves that the zohar originated in 1st century Palestine. The cobbled-together nature of the aramaic of the zohar plainly shows the medieval origins of this work. this is obvious to anyone who has studied the work. the language is simply not Talmudic-era aramaic.
The Drudge Report today announced that: "Madonna: I'm an 'Ambassador for Judaism'." It would appear that Modonna gave something called the "Book of Splendor" to the President of Israel, Shimon Peres. Is this "Book of Splendor" the Zohar? If so, this article should make reference to this English-language term.
I've removed some stuff that was obviously the thoughts of various editors -- see WP:OR and WP:Verify. I think that there is quite a bit still that needs specific citations - for books, this means page numbers. Cited authors need to discuss the specific claim being made in the article, remember. And citations should all be of the same style, see WP:CITE. Thanks. Dougweller (talk) 07:55, 15 April 2009 (UTC)
Too much of this article discusses critiques of Zohar and not enough describes its structure or format. Patrij (talk) 15:05, 19 July 2009 (UTC)
I agree that we need more on the structure of the Zohar itself, and its traditional history. I will also do a section for the Sulam Commentary by Kabbalist Yehuda Ashlag. If there is anything else we need to do to make this article class A. Need to research for this edit. Empireheart (talk) 08:43, 1 October 2009 (UTC)
After a lot of sweat and tears, I think we have a good article for the Zohar. Need more formatting on the structure section to make it look nicer to the eyes. A history of editing can be found here, also added the edits on the article since I started my editing, one drawback to editing in a sandbox. Editing History —Preceding unsigned comment added by Empireheart (talk • contribs) 23:27, 16 December 2009 (UTC)
There is still a large amount of direct quotation and paraphrase from the Jewish Encyclopedia without attribution Markdf10825 (talk) 17:04, 25 February 2010 (UTC)
I wonder if anyone could tell me how Jews receive the book of Zohar today? Is it commonly accepted and used? Or is it used and accepted only in certain, specialized kabbalisitc Jewish schools? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.75.192.138 (talk) 23:10, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
There should be some discussion of neo-platonist influence on the Zohar, particularly the theory of emanations.86.44.85.109 (talk) 11:27, 20 December 2010 (UTC)
I believe the analysis in the following paragraph here is incorrect. When Scholem was talking about "Gnostics in Castile", he wasn't talking about non-Jewish gnostics. "Castille Gnostics" was his special term for a group of Kabbalists he had found in his research, that wrote about the "left hand emanation" (sitra ahra). Scholem was saying that this influenced the "sitra ahra" of the Zohar. Maybe it's a mistake that he called them "gnostics", but anyway, they were just another influence of Jewish Kabbalists on the Zohar. I or someone else can change the wording to reflect this (there are plenty of refs for it).
In the picture on this page, "Daath" (דעת) appears as דצת. What the hell? Myrkkyhammas (talk) 00:10, 21 April 2011 (UTC)
Chabad has a Daily Zohar study section with videos. Granted this is from a Chassidic point of view; at least it is complete. 108.45.122.74 (talk) 13:56, 5 August 2012 (UTC)
could you provide me a link to some of those videos? or some reference?Thanks--Noah Bernstein (talk) 13:08, 28 September 2012 (UTC)
The link to Zohar with English on archive.org doesn't work; archive.org has posted a message about its content. Please remove until this is resolved. 96.255.124.231 (talk) 12:20, 4 November 2013 (UTC)
In the section, Contemporary religious view, the author in his own voice writes, "He [, Menachem Mendel Kasher,] writes: 1. Many statements in the works of the Rishonim (medieval commentors who preceded De Leon) refer to Medrashim that we are not aware of. He writes ..."
I have added the bolding. So who is "we"? the reference is obviously not to Menachem Mendel Kasher because the next sentence refers to him again in the 3rd person. With this statement, the writer of this article apparently referring to -- himself and other rabbis? -- other students of Judaism?
This does not satisfy the neutral point of view. I have not been able to find the original editor who introduced this WP:NPOV issue, but it seems to be more than 5 years ago. Will some interested and informed editor please fix? Slade Farney (talk) 23:24, 6 February 2015 (UTC)
I wrote this a while back but the truth is "admits" isn't the right word "admonishes" is better but that didn't fit in the paragraph so i just wrote admits Sadya goan (talk) 13:20, 14 October 2015 (UTC)
'Delmendigo' in Spanish means: 'From the beggar', or: 'Of the beggar'. The surname: 'León' exists today in Spain, 68'736 individuals wear it (Aplicativo apellidos INE), e.g., in a singer named: 'Rosa León', who attended many Trotskyist meetings during the days of demonstrations against the general Franco regime, or Carmen Chaparro-León, a TV screenwriter. Agur. Gesund +
What’s some of the content of the Zohar?
I think it’s amazing that there’s almost no presentation of Zohar content. There’s a sentence or two on each of the ~20 parts, see Structure. Could be based on the new translation edition by Daniel Matt. You could even use the content points he mentions in describing each volume: https://www.sup.org/books/series/?series=The%20Zohar:%20Pritzker%20Edition Or rely on other secondary sources, like Art Green’s Guide to the Matt translation.
This is a great opportunity for some editor to contribute. It could result in new sub-articles, as there are for many major, multi-volume religious works. ProfGray (talk) 09:58, 11 July 2022 (UTC)
1) In connection with https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zohar&oldid=1098418639, making all the links "in one" makes things less unwieldy one the one hand, but falls short in omitting the page #s for the different things (e.g., for Soloveitchik page ט [PDF page 130]; for Yosef page ב [PDF page 123]; etc.).
2) What page is מאזוז mentioned in Shapiro's article?
3) Wiki here claims that Moses Gaster wrote that it's "impossible to believe that ben Yochai wrote it". However, Shapiro's article (page י [PDF page 131]) doesn't have Gaster making this statement, so the quotation marks should go if it's not a quotation. Contributor613 (talk) 19:19, 15 July 2022 (UTC)
Dear @GordonGlottal, you commented on my edition about influences on the Zohar, that one of these sources (Huss) disagrees with the content of my edits. The claim was "Huss source says the opposite, that there is no evidence of contact with Sufism until centuries later". Going through the source again, I failed to find this point. The source, in overall, explores the development of cocneptualizing Kabbalah and Sufism as "universal mysticism". There is one instance, in which an identification of Sufism with the Kabbalah is criticized:
However, I would like to historicize and problematize the presuppositions concerning the significant interactions and remarkable parallelism between Kabbalah and Sufism, as well as the identifica�tion of these movements as Jewish and Islamic mysticism.
However, criticism is directed to unifying both traditions as one "universal mysticism".
Since the nineteenth century, Western scholars researched the resem�blance and transfer of doctrines and practices between Kabbalah and Sufism and suggested that these movements represent Jewish and Islamic mysticism.
and
This chapter will show that the pervasive notion concerning the proximity and remarkable resemblance of Sufism and Kabbalah is dependent on the defi�nition and interpretation of these traditions as expressions of a universal, mystical, religious phenomenon
To built up the arguement, the author summarizes a lot of view points in accordance with my edit. Furthermore, I do not think that the previous criticism on the conceptualization of Sufism and Kabbalah, denies that there has been influences by Sufism on the Zohar. I would like to give some examples in the following in support of my view:
It is possible that Harar’s teacher, Abraham Abulafia, the founder of the school of prophetic Kabbalah, who was rejected by mainstream Kabbalists of his time, was also acquainted with Sufi teachings and practices. Nonetheless, Abulafia does not mention Muslim Sufis in his writings.
In the early twentieth century, the rabbi and scholar Ariel Bension (1880–1932) suggested in his book The Zohar in Moslem and Christian Spain that there are many shared concepts between Sufism, especially, the writing of the Sufi philosopher and poet Ibn al-ʽArabi (1165–1240), and the canonical text of Kabbalah, Sefer ha-Zohar, which was composed in the late thirteenth century
Fenton concluded that there is a remarkable parallelism and resem�blance between Islamic and Jewish mysticism, and that Sufism had a long and significant impact on Kabbalah and Hasidism.49 Similarly, Moshe Idel asserted that: “Muslim Mysticism should be recognized as an important source of influence on Jewish Mysticism, especially, in its contribution to augmenting the radical mystical element, and in details concerning mysti�cal techniques. There is no doubt that the influence of Sufism on Kabbalah is greater than of Christian Mysticism
Although cultural transfers also existed between non-Sufi Islamic circles (such as Ismaili and other Shi’i movements) and Kabbalah, and although Sufism had a considerable impact on Jewish movements other than Kabbalah, such as on the Jewish theologian Bahya ibn Paquda (1050–1120) and the Jewish pietistic movement in Egypt, scholars and practitioners emphasize especially the Kabbalistic–Sufi connections
If the source is too vague about influences of Sufism, there is much in the source to cover Islamic influences. It is also accepted that the concept of fallen angels within the Kabbala are inspired by their Islamic counterparts (Christian D Ginsburg The Kabbalah (Routledge Revivals): Its Doctrines, Development, and Literature Routledge 2015 ISBN 978-1-317-58888-7 p. 109), as Judaism rejected the notion of fallen angels in the early years, when Islam generally accepted them (today there is a tendency for the opposite). Besides, what was objectable about the other influences by Neo-Platonism, Christianity, and Islam? I am aware that in Jewish beliefs, Kabbalah is ancient. However, this notion is devoid of any historical support. Influence by Greek philosophy, Christianity, and Islam is quite obvious, and, I argue, further supported by the elaboration of the sources provided. Please further note that there are two sources you reverted while only giving your reason for one. I kindly ask you to elaborate on your objection further. My suggestion is, that we remove the disputed "Sufism" addition and stay with the obvious influences (Greek philosophy, Christianity, and Islam). with best regards VenusFeuerFalle (talk) 13:25, 29 January 2024 (UTC)