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Tekhelet

 

("blue"). A blue-green dye used in priestly and royal garments (Ezek. 23:6). According to biblical law, a strand of this shade is to be included in each set of the fringes of the Tsitsit (Num. 15:38). The sages say that tekhelet resembles the sea, which resembles the sky, which in turn resembles the color of God's seat of glory (Men. 43b). Thus, the tekhelet in the tsitsit serves as a reminder of God's presence everywhere. According to the Talmud, tekhelet is derived from a kind of snail, referred to as ḥillazon, found in the sea off the northern coast of Erets Israel (Sanh. 91a). The process for obtaining the dye was lengthy and hence expensive. The Mishnah mentions a dye named kela ilan, evidently indigo, which gave a color close to tekhelet (Men. 42b). As the two were almost indistinguishable, the sages recommended that tekhelet threads be bought only from an expert (ibid.). Later on, the process involved was evidently forgotten, and as Jewish law does not make tekhelet obligatory, the fringes used for tsitsit were all white. In the 19th century, a Ḥasidic rabbi, Gershon Ḥanokh Leiner, known as the Radziner Rebbe, claimed that the dye needed to produce tekhelet could be obtained from the cuttlefish. R. Isaac Halevi Herzog identified the source of tekhelet as a species of snail which rarely comes near the shore. Ḥasidim of the Radziner sect adopted the findings of the Radziner Rebbe and their tsitsit contain a dyed blue thread. Most prominent rabbis, however, do not accept his argument and the vast majority of observant Jews continue to use only white fringes in their tsitsit.

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A set of tzitzit with blue tekhelet thread

Tekhelet, (Hebrew: תכלת‎), Techelet or Techeiles is a blue dye mentioned 48 times in the Jewish Bible (Tanakh) and translated by the Septuagint as hyakinthinos (Greek: ὑακίνθινος, blue). Its uses include the clothing of the High Priest, the tapestries in the Mishkan, and the tassels (known as Tzitzit) to be affixed to the corners of one's garments. Following the destruction of the Temple by the Romans, the sole use of the blue dyed strings was in the tzitzit. Tzitzit are tassels composed of 4 strings for which Rabbinic Judaism offers three opinions as to how many are to be blue: 2 strings (Rashi, Tosafos, Rosh); 1 string (Raavad); Half String (Rambam).

Contents

Talmudic source

The Talmud teaches that the source for the blue dye is a marine creature known as the "hillazon" (Hebrew: חילזון‎), translated as "snail" in Modern Hebrew. The Talmud also mentions a counterfeit dye from a plant called Kela-Ilan, known as Indigofera tinctoria, the ubiquitous source of blue dye in the ancient world. The Talmud explains that it is absolutely forbidden to use this counterfeit dye intentionally (i.e., if one was duped, the strings are still kosher, however they simply do not fulfill the religious requirement for tekhelet strings).[1] The Tosefta explains that Kela Ilan is not the only invalid dye source, but in fact everything but the chillazon is unacceptable for making the blue dye.

Lost knowledge

At some point following the Roman exile of the Jews from the land of Israel, the source of the dye was lost and as a result the Jews have worn only plain white tassles.[2]

The stripes on prayer shawls, often black, but also blue or purple, are believed to symbolize the lost tekhelet which is referred to by various sources as being "black as midnight", "blue as the midday sky", and even purple.[3] Interestingly, these stripes of tekhelet inspired the design of the flag of Israel.

Over the last two centuries, attempts have been made to identify the ancient source of the dye by comparing Talmudic sources to physical evidence.[4] Three types of mollusks have been proposed as the lost "chillazon". None have been universally accepted, though the Murex, Murex trunculus, known by the modern name Hexaplex trunculus is thought to be the most likely source of the biblical blue dye. Most Jews continue to wear only white tzitziot, following their poskim (decisors of Jewish law).

Chilazon in the Talmud

In the Talmud, (Tractate Menchot 44a, the chilazon is described as follows:[5]:

  1. Its body is similar to the sea.
  2. Its form is like a fish.
  3. It comes up once in 70 years,
  4. With its "blood" one dyes tekhelet,
  5. Therefore: It is expensive.

Other criteria (with Talmudic references):

  • The fishers of the chilazon are from Haifa to the ladder ofTyre (Shabbat 26a)
  • The color of the chilazon dye is identical to that produced from the dye of the kela ilan plant (Indigofera tinctoria), which served as a counterfeit source of the dye (Baba Metzia 61b)
  • Cracking open the shell of the chilazon on Shabbat violates the laws of Shabbat (Shabbat 75a)
  • The shell of the chilazon grows together with it (Midrash Shir haShirim Rabbah 4:11)
  • It is an invertebrate (Yerushalmi Sabbath 1:3 8a)

Sepia officinalis

The common cuttlefish.
A sample of Prussian blue.

In 1887 Grand Rabbi Gershon Henoch Leiner, the Radziner Rebbe, researched the subject and concluded that the Sepia officinalis (common cuttlefish) met many of the criteria. Within a year, Radziner chassidim began wearing tzitzit dyed with a colorant produced from this cephalopod. The Breslov Hasidim also adopted this custom due to Rebbi Nachman's pronouncement on the great importance of wearing tekhelet.

Rav Herzog obtained a sample of this dye and had it chemically analyzed. The chemists concluded that it was a well-known synthetic dye "Prussian blue" whose color is produced from iron filings, with the cuttlefish merely supplying nitrogen which could have as easily been supplied from a vast array of organic sources (e.g., ox blood). R. Herzog thus rejected the cuttlefish as the chilazon and some suggest that had the Radziner Rebbe known this fact, he too would have rejected it based on his explicit criterion that the blue color must come from the animal and that all other additives are permitted solely to aid the color in adhering to the wool (P'til Tekhelet, p.168).

Janthina

Within his doctoral research on the subject tekhelet, Rav Herzog placed great hopes on demonstrating that the Murex trunculus was the genuine "Chillazon". However, having failed to consistently achieve blue dye from the M. trunculus, he wrote: “If for the present all hope is to be abandoned of rediscovering the hillazon shel tekhelet in some species of the genera Murex and Purpura we could do worse than suggest the Janthina as a not improbable identification” (Herzog, p.71). Although blue dye has indeed been obtained from the M. trunculus snail, in 2002 Dr. S.W. Kaplan of Rehovot, Israel proclaimed that he was able to dye wool with the extract of Janthina. This claim has to date not been substantiated.

Murex trunculus

A guide from P'til Tekhelet shows how a piece of wool, dipped into the solution for the dye, turns blue in sunlight.

Murex trunculus, a sea snail, is popularly advanced as the source of the coveted dye.[6] Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog (1889-1959) wrote his doctoral thesis in 1913 on the subject and named the Murex snail as the most likely candidate for the dye's source. Though the Murex fulfilled many of the Talmudic criteria, R. Herzog's inability to consistently obtain blue dye (sometimes the dye was purple) from the snail precluded him from proclaiming that the dye source had been found.

Rediscovery

In the 1980s, Otto Elsner, a chemist from the Shenkar College of Fibers in Israel discovered that if a solution of the dye was exposed to sunlight, blue instead of purple was consistently produced. Eventually, in 1993, the Ptil Tekhelet Foundation was formed for mass production of Murex trunculus, tekhelet, as well as to continue further research.

Karaite views

Some Karaite Jews use indigo blue in their fringes (Tzitzit).[1]

Other applications

The Australian Flinders University Biological scientists Dr Kirsten Benkendorff and Dr Catherine Abbott, investigating the anti-cancer potential of the local species of sea snail Dicathais orbita or Australian Dogwhelks found the bioactive compounds involved in the production of a purple dye which have many possible medicinal uses, including a novel anti-cancer agent that proved effective in curing breast cancer. They announced in October 2008 that the research into M. purpurea will also be conducted which has an active ingredient sourced from the same family of mollusc as the Australian Dogwhelk.[7]

See also

References


 
 
Learn More
The Bible (Num. 15:38) makes reference to a "blue string" within the tzitzit or fringes. To what does this allude?
Ptil Tekhelet Foundation
Tzitzit

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Encyclopedia of Judaism. The New Encyclopedia of Judaism. Copyright © 1989, 2002 by G.G. The Jerusalem Publishing House, Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Tekhelet" Read more