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Gershom ben Judah

 
Biography: Gershom ben Judah

The German rabbi, scholar, and religious poet Gershom ben Judah (ca. 950-1028) exerted a great influence on Jewish social institutions. He is also known as Rabbenu Gershom and Meor Ha-Golah, "Light of the Exile."

The places of the birth and death of Gershom ben Judah are not known with certainty, but he passed most of his adult life at Mainz, Germany. Gershom's importance arose from the fact that his teaching career as a rabbinical authority came just after the extinction of the rabbinical centers in Babylonia. With the consolidation of the Moslem Empire, the Babylonian scholars drifted across to Europe, bringing with them their manuscripts, their scribal tradition, their teaching, and their authority. The Palestinian centers had long ceased. As a result, central Europe and for a time Spain became the heartland of Jewish life and evolution. Later, Spain was to cease and only central European Jewry remained.

Gershom's distinction lay in the fact that he was one of the first and most successful rabbis to transplant and establish the Talmudic learning of Babylonia to Europe. Gershom was an excellent rabbinical scholar, was steeped in all the ancient traditions, and was a natural teacher and organizer of studies. He had, in addition, a consummate judgment in deciding moral and ethical matters concerning the ordinary actions of life. These qualities assured him his success and his popularity.

Gershom's foundational work was his treatment of the Talmud text. He established correct readings, provided illuminating commentaries, drew up exegetical rules, and taught exact methods of interpretation. Gradually, from being merely an academic center of attraction for rabbinical students from all over Europe, he and his school became the guide, mentor, and judge for the autonomous Jewish communities of France, Germany, and the Low Countries. Participating in meetings of community leaders, he helped to shape their social and cooperative institutions, and he defined local laws and customs.

Gershom's influence was profound and felt far beyond his time. It was not merely that he was the educator and molder of the rabbis who then went back to their home communities. It lay much more in the enduring legislation which was enacted under his guidance. The prohibition of polygamy, the limitation of the husband's right to divorce, the treatment of apostates returning to Jewry, the privacy of personal letters, the promulgation of the principle of majority rule in the local communities - these were but a few of his major enactments. Violation of these laws he proposed and had had enacted were punished by excommunication from the community of Israel; this was known in time as the "herem (ban) of Rabbenu Gershom." He was author of many responsa, or answers, to knotty legal questions and problems which arose in the everyday life of the communities and which entailed apparent conflict of law and commandment. The formation of community cohesion and the strengthening of the community's self-awareness were of powerful consequence for the subsequent fate of European Jewry. These communities were able to withstand and survive the 700 years of persecution and ostracism that were in store for them until the Hitlerian terror swept their underpinnings away forever.

Gershom was author also of penitential prayers (selihot), and he prepared a copy of the biblical Masorah, or traditional method of reading and pronouncing, and therefore of interpreting, the Bible.

Further Reading

Background works that discuss Gershom ben Judah are Israel Abrahams, Jewish Life in the Middle Ages (1896; rev. ed. 1932), and Cecil Roth, A Short History of the Jewish People (1936; rev. ed. 1959).

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Encyclopedia of Judaism: Gershom Ben Judah
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(known as Me'or ha-Golah ["Light of the Exile"]; 960-1028). Rabbinic authority. Born in Metz, he established his academy in Mainz, where he continued to teach for the remainder of his life. He exercised great rabbinic authority over European Jewry owing both to his scholarship and his leadership qualities. His Takkanot (new ordinances) promulgated at rabbinical assemblies at his initiative were accepted as binding by all Ashkenazi communities. Two of the most important regulations associated with his name dealt with the status of women in Jewish law: the first outlawed bigamy for Jews; the second modified the practical aspect of the biblical laws of Divorce. According to biblical law, it is only the husband who can take the initiative in a divorce proceeding. He has the bill of divorce (get) written and delivered to his wife, with or without her consent. Rabbenu Gershom ruled that the divorce can be effected only with the consent of both parties. The husband must agree to have the bill of divorce written and the wife must be willing to accept it. Another regulation was the prohibition against reading letters addressed to others.

One of his greatest achievements was the collation of a complete and authentic text of the Talmud. Before the invention of printing, texts of the Talmud, and even of the Bible, were very rare and extremely expensive. Most teaching was therefore conducted orally, usually with only the teacher possessing a copy of the text he was expounding. Students, scholars, and scribes copied out the texts for themselves. Errors resulting from faulty transcription, or from the deliberate emendation of a text thought to be incorrect, were frequent. This resulted in variant readings of the same passage, with the concomitant problem of deciding which text was authentic. Rabbenu Gershom compiled a complete Talmud manuscript bearing his signature, which became, more or less, the accepted text of the Talmud. He also prepared a complete Bible text which was correct to the last detail of the Masorah.

Few of his comments on the Talmud have survived, but some are quoted by Rashi. He also wrote several Seliḥot (penitential prayers) and Piyyutim (liturgical poems), some of which are still to be found in the prayer book.

Gershom's eminence as a scholar and his acknowledged authority gained him the title Me'or ha-Golah---the Light of the Exile. This apparently derives from a reference to him in a responsum of Rashi, who said "Rabbenu Gershom has brought light to the eyes of the Exile, for all live by his instruction. All the Jews of these [European] countries call themselves disciples of his disciples."


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Gershom ben Judah
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Gershom ben Judah (gr'shəm bĕn jū'), c.965-c.1040?, rabbi, religious poet, and scholar. He was also called Me'or ha-Golah [light of the exile]. He lived his entire adult life in Mainz, Germany (now in France), where he founded a Talmudic academy. He played an important role in the formation of an Ashkenazic tradition of learning and communal organization. He wrote commentaries on the Talmud, liturgical poetry, and numerous responsa. He is famous for his highly influential edict against polygamy.
Wikipedia: Gershom ben Judah
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Gershom ben Judah, (c. 960 -1040? -1028?) best known as Rabbeinu Gershom (Hebrew: רבנו גרשום, "Our teacher Gershom") and also commonly known to scholars of Judaism by the title Rabbeinu Gershom Me'Or Hagolah ("Our teacher Gershom the light of the exile"), was a famous Talmudist and Halakhist.

Rashi of Troyes (d. 1105) said less than a century after Gershom's death, "all members of the Ashkenazi diaspora are students of his." As early as the 14th century Asher ben Jehiel wrote that Rabbeinu Gershom's writings were "such permanent fixtures that they may well have been handed down on Mount Sinai."

About 1000 CE Gershom called a synod that decided the following particulars, altering the practice of Rabbinic Judaism: (1) prohibition of polygamy; (2) necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a divorce; (3) modification of the rules concerning those who became apostates under compulsion; (4) prohibition against opening correspondence addressed to another.

Contents

Biography

Born in Metz in 960, Gershom was a student of Judah ben Meir ha-Kohen (Sir Léontin), who was one of the greatest authorities of his time.[1] Having lost his first wife, Gershom married a widow named Bonna and settled at Mainz (Mayence), where he devoted himself to teaching the Talmud. During his lifetime Mainz became a center of Torah and Jewish scholarship for many Jewish communities in Europe that had formerly been connected with the Babylonian yeshivas. He was the spiritual guide of the fledgling Ashkenazic Jewish communities and was very influential in molding them at a time when their population was dwindling.

Students came from all over Europe to enroll in his yeshiva, and later dispersed among various communities in Germany and beyond which helped spread Jewish learning. He had many pupils from different countries, among whom should be mentioned Eleazar ben Isaac (ha-Gadol ="the Great"), nephew of Simeon ha-Gadol; and Jacob ben Yakar, teacher of Rashi. The fame of his learning eclipsed even that of the heads of the academies of Sura (city) and Pumbedita.

His life conformed to his teachings. He had a son, who forsook his religion at the time of the expulsion of the Jews from Mainz in 1012. When his son converted to become a Christian R. Gershom grieved and observed the strictures of mourning for 14 days, double the required time for an actual death. However, he did apparently rule leniently regarding those who had submitted to baptism to escape persecution, and who afterward returned to the Jewish fold. He strictly prohibited reproaching them with infidelity, and even gave those among them who had been slandered an opportunity to publicly pronounce the benediction in the synagogues.

Teachings

Questions of religious casuistry were addressed to him from all countries, and measures which he authorized had legal force among all the Jews of Europe. About 1000 CE he called a synod which decided the following particulars: (1) prohibition of polygamy; (2) necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a divorce; (3) modification of the rules concerning those who became apostates under compulsion; (4) prohibition against opening correspondence addressed to another.

Works

Gershom's literary activity was not less fruitful. He is celebrated for his works in the field of Biblical exegesis, the Masorah, and lexicography. He revised the text of the Mishnah and Talmud,[citation needed] and wrote commentaries on several treatises of the latter which were very popular and gave an impulse to the production of other works of the kind. His selichot were inspired by the bloody persecutions of his time. Gershom also left a large number of rabbinical responsa, which are scattered throughout various collections.


He is the author of Seliha 42 - Zechor Berit Avraham ("Remember the Covenant of Abraham"), a liturgical poem recited by Ashkenazic Jews during the season of Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur.

"The Holy City and its regions
are turned to shame and to spoils
and all its desirable things are buried and hidden
and nothing is left except this Torah."

Synod and bans

He is famous for his religious bans within Judaism, which include:

  • The prohibition of polygamy (until the end of fifth millenium(1240 C.E.) according to some opinions others find no mention of this limatation in the early sources.
  • The prohibition of divorcing a woman against her will.
  • The prohibition of reading private mail.

His bans are considered binding on all of Ashkenazic Jewry until the present day, although the reasons for this are controversial. Some hold that the bans are still binding and others consider them to have expired but nonetheless obligatory to follow as universally accepted customs.

Some have speculated that if Rabbeinu Gershom had never lived then there may not have been something known as "Ashkenazic Judaism" as it is known today.

References

  1. ^ As he himself says in a responsum reported by R. Meir of Rothenburg, he owed most of his knowledge to his teacher, Judah ben Meir ha-Kohen (Sir Léontin), who was one of the greatest authorities of his time.

See also

External links

Bibliography

With regard to the so-called Ordinances of Rabbi Gershom see especially

  • Rosenthal, in Jubelschrift zum Siebzigsten Geburtstag des Dr. Israel Hildesheimer, pp. 37 et seq., Berlin, 1890.


This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.


 
 
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