Difference between revisions of "Commentators:R. Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)/0"

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<li>The GRA’s interests and teachings encompassed the entire world of Torah, both exoteric and esoteric.<fn>His involvement in esotericism included not only the study of the entire corpus of Kabbalistic texts, but also mystical experiences and practical Kabbalah. In addition to an attempt to create a golem (see note above in this section), the GRA is reported to have refused to receive revelations offered him by angelic maggidim, and to have attributed higher value to Torah secrets discovered through conventional intellectual endeavor than those obtained through an “ascent of the soul” (a kind of mystical experience that R. Chayyim of Volozhin infers the GRA indeed had. Regarding both this and the GRA’s encounters with maggidim, see R. Chayyim’s introduction to the GRA’s commentary on Sifra DeTzniuta). For a discussion of why the GRA devalued knowledge obtained in mystical ways, see the discussion in Etkes, Gaon: 27-32, where he suggests, among other things, that the GRA may have been responding to the Frankists, a secret Sabbatean sect whose antinomian nature came to the fore in the 1750s, creating a controversy that had a strong impact throughout Poland and Lithuania.</fn></li>
 
<li>The GRA’s interests and teachings encompassed the entire world of Torah, both exoteric and esoteric.<fn>His involvement in esotericism included not only the study of the entire corpus of Kabbalistic texts, but also mystical experiences and practical Kabbalah. In addition to an attempt to create a golem (see note above in this section), the GRA is reported to have refused to receive revelations offered him by angelic maggidim, and to have attributed higher value to Torah secrets discovered through conventional intellectual endeavor than those obtained through an “ascent of the soul” (a kind of mystical experience that R. Chayyim of Volozhin infers the GRA indeed had. Regarding both this and the GRA’s encounters with maggidim, see R. Chayyim’s introduction to the GRA’s commentary on Sifra DeTzniuta). For a discussion of why the GRA devalued knowledge obtained in mystical ways, see the discussion in Etkes, Gaon: 27-32, where he suggests, among other things, that the GRA may have been responding to the Frankists, a secret Sabbatean sect whose antinomian nature came to the fore in the 1750s, creating a controversy that had a strong impact throughout Poland and Lithuania.</fn></li>
<li>He studied secular subjects such as algebra, geometry, astronomy, and medicine, and valued such fields as providing assistance in understanding the Torah.<fn>In a very famous passage, the early maskil R. Barukh of Shklov writes (in his introduction to his Hebrew translation of Euclid’s Elements) of his teacher the GRA: “I heard from the holy one that, to the extent that a person is lacking in knowledge of secular subjects, he will lack one hundredfold in the wisdom of the Torah. For the Torah and secular knowledge are bound together. . . He commanded me to translate whatever possible of the secular subjects into our holy tongue…” The GRA is also reported (by R. Avraham Simchah of Amcislaw, R. Hayyim of Volozhin’s nephew) to have desired a Hebrew translation of Josephus (see Etkes, Gaon: 53). For a discussion of the relationship of the GRA to the Haskalah, and whether he can be viewed as a harbinger of the Haskalah, see Etkes, Gaon: 37 ff. It is further worth noting that the GRA did not know foreign languages and thus learned all his science from Hebrew texts, which mostly were composed in medieval times and therefore reflected pre-modern scientific views. The GRA was thus unaware of Newton’s theories and the beginnings of modern chemistry. He maintained the Aristotelian theory of the four elements, even sometimes incorporating it into his interpretations.</fn> In contrast, he had a rather negative view of philosophy.<fn>See Be’ur HaGra to Shulchan Arukh Yoreh De’ah 179:6, where he famously criticizes Rambam for being led astray by “accursed” philosophy. The word “accursed”, which appears in the first printing of Be’ur HaGra, was removed by later publishers. For a discussion of this issue, and Eliyahu Stern’s theory (in his book The Genius: Elijah of Vilna and the Making of Modern Judaism (New Haven, 2013) that the GRA did not oppose philosophy, see M. Shapiro’s review of Stern’s book: <a href="http://seforim.blogspot.co.il/2013/12/the-vilna-gaon-part-1-how-modern-was-he.html">“The Vilna Gaon, Part 1: How Modern Was He?”</a> .</fn></li>
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<li>He studied secular subjects such as algebra, geometry, astronomy, medicine, and music theory,<fn>His student, R. Yisrael of Shklov, reports (in the introduction to his Pe'at HaShulchan) regarding the GRA's attitude towards music:<br/>&#8207;הוא היה אומר אז כי רוב טעמי תורה וסודות שירי הלויים וסודות תיקוני זהר אי אפשר לידע בלעדה, ועל ידה יכולים בני אדם למות בכלות נפשם מנעימותיה, ויכולים להחיות מתים בסודותיה הגנוזים בתורה. הוא אמר כמה ניגונים וכמה מדות הביא משה רבנו מהר סיני והשאר מורכבים</fn> and valued such fields as providing assistance in understanding the Torah.<fn>In a very famous passage, the early maskil R. Barukh of Shklov writes (in his introduction to his Hebrew translation of Euclid’s Elements) of his teacher the GRA: “I heard from the holy one that, to the extent that a person is lacking in knowledge of secular subjects, he will lack one hundredfold in the wisdom of the Torah. For the Torah and secular knowledge are bound together. . . He commanded me to translate whatever possible of the secular subjects into our holy tongue…” The GRA is also reported (by R. Avraham Simchah of Amcislaw, R. Hayyim of Volozhin’s nephew) to have desired a Hebrew translation of Josephus (see Etkes, Gaon: 53). For a discussion of the relationship of the GRA to the Haskalah, and whether he can be viewed as a harbinger of the Haskalah, see Etkes, Gaon: 37 ff. It is further worth noting that the GRA did not know foreign languages and thus learned all his science from Hebrew texts, which mostly were composed in medieval times and therefore reflected pre-modern scientific views. The GRA was thus unaware of Newton’s theories and the beginnings of modern chemistry. He maintained the Aristotelian theory of the four elements, even sometimes incorporating it into his interpretations.</fn> In contrast, he had a rather negative view of philosophy.<fn>See Be’ur HaGra to Shulchan Arukh Yoreh De’ah 179:6, where he famously criticizes Rambam for being led astray by “accursed” philosophy. The word “accursed”, which appears in the first printing of Be’ur HaGra, was removed by later publishers. For a discussion of this issue, and Eliyahu Stern’s theory (in his book The Genius: Elijah of Vilna and the Making of Modern Judaism (New Haven, 2013) that the GRA did not oppose philosophy, see M. Shapiro’s review of Stern’s book: <a href="http://seforim.blogspot.co.il/2013/12/the-vilna-gaon-part-1-how-modern-was-he.html">“The Vilna Gaon, Part 1: How Modern Was He?”</a> .<br/>See also the introduction to Pe'at HaShulchan, where R. Yisrael of Shklov reports of the GRA's attitude towards philosophy:<br/>ועל חכמת הפילוסופיא אמר שלמד אותה לתכליתה ולא הוציא ממנה רק ב' דברים טובים, והם שבעים כוחות הנפש ועוד דבר א'. והשאר צריך להשליכה החוצה</fn></li>
 
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<li><b>Occupation</b> –</li>
 
<li><b>Occupation</b> –</li>
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<li>At some point before 1783, the GRA set out for Eretz Yisrael, intending to send for his family later. However, he never reached his destination – for unknown reasons<fn>See M. Tzuriel, Otzerot Gedolei Yisrael Vol. 2:139-142 for a discussion of possible reasons.</fn> – and returned to Vilna.<fn>While on his journey, he wrote a letter to his family. See below, Works.</fn> Nevertheless, he famously encouraged his students to emigrate to Eretz Yisrael, and it was a group of his students and their families who comprised one of the first major waves of modern Jewish settlement in Eretz Yisrael.<fn>For an account of this immigration, see A. Morgenstern, Hastening Redemption: Messianism and the Resettlement of the Land of Israel (New York, 2006).</fn></li>
 
<li>At some point before 1783, the GRA set out for Eretz Yisrael, intending to send for his family later. However, he never reached his destination – for unknown reasons<fn>See M. Tzuriel, Otzerot Gedolei Yisrael Vol. 2:139-142 for a discussion of possible reasons.</fn> – and returned to Vilna.<fn>While on his journey, he wrote a letter to his family. See below, Works.</fn> Nevertheless, he famously encouraged his students to emigrate to Eretz Yisrael, and it was a group of his students and their families who comprised one of the first major waves of modern Jewish settlement in Eretz Yisrael.<fn>For an account of this immigration, see A. Morgenstern, Hastening Redemption: Messianism and the Resettlement of the Land of Israel (New York, 2006).</fn></li>
 
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<li><b>Family</b> –&#160;– The GRA came from a well-known rabbinical family. He married his first wife Channah around the age of eighteen. After she died in 1782, he married Gitel. He had three sons<fn>Two of these sons, Avraham and Yehudah Leib, published the GRA’s Torah commentary and other works.</fn> and four daughters, all from his first wife.<fn>See B. Landau, הגאון החסיד מוילנא (Jerusalem, 1978): 267-268 and notes, and S. Leiman, <a href="http://ou.org.s3.amazonaws.com/publications/ja/5759winter/leiman.htm" data-aht="page">“Who is Buried in the Vilna Gaon’s Tomb?</a>”</fn></li>
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<li><b>Family</b> – The GRA came from a well-known rabbinical family. He married his first wife Channah around the age of eighteen. After she died in 1782, he married Gitel. He had three sons<fn>Two of these sons, Avraham and Yehudah Leib, published the GRA’s Torah commentary and other works.</fn> and four daughters, all from his first wife.<fn>See B. Landau, הגאון החסיד מוילנא (Jerusalem, 1978): 267-268 and notes, and S. Leiman, <a href="http://ou.org.s3.amazonaws.com/publications/ja/5759winter/leiman.htm" data-aht="page">“Who is Buried in the Vilna Gaon’s Tomb?</a>”</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Teachers</b> –&#160;<b></b>R. Moshe Margolioth of Keidany<fn>Author of Penei Moshe, commentary on the Jerusalem Talmud. The GRA studied with him for a time starting at age seven.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Teachers</b> –&#160;<b></b>R. Moshe Margolioth of Keidany<fn>Author of Penei Moshe, commentary on the Jerusalem Talmud. The GRA studied with him for a time starting at age seven.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Contemporaries</b> –&#160;R. Yonatan Eybeschuetz,<fn>In 1756, supporters of R. Eybeschuetz requested that the GRA arbitrate in the controversy with R. Yaakov Emden. The GRA, however, demurred. Nonetheless, the incident shows the extremely high regard in which the GRA was held, despite his relative youth, reclusive lifestyle, and geographical distance from the controversy’s main protagonists.</fn> R. Yaakov Emden, R. Yaakov Krantz (the Maggid of Dubno)<fn>Despite his reclusive tendencies, the GRA actively sought the Maggid’s friendship and invited him to his home.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Contemporaries</b> –&#160;R. Yonatan Eybeschuetz,<fn>In 1756, supporters of R. Eybeschuetz requested that the GRA arbitrate in the controversy with R. Yaakov Emden. The GRA, however, demurred. Nonetheless, the incident shows the extremely high regard in which the GRA was held, despite his relative youth, reclusive lifestyle, and geographical distance from the controversy’s main protagonists.</fn> R. Yaakov Emden, R. Yaakov Krantz (the Maggid of Dubno)<fn>Despite his reclusive tendencies, the GRA actively sought the Maggid’s friendship and invited him to his home.</fn></li>

Version as of 23:56, 28 July 2015

R. Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)

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Vilna Gaon
Name
R. Eliyahu b. Shelomo Zalman, Vilna Gaon
ר' אליהו בן שלמה זלמן, הגר"א
Dates1720-1797
LocationLithuania
WorksAderet Eliyahu on Tanakh, Beur HaGRA
Exegetical Characteristics
Influenced by
Impacted on

Background1

Life

  • Name – 
    • Hebrew name – ר' אליהו בן שלמה זלמן2
    • _ name – 
  • Dates – 1720-1797
  • Location – Born in Selets, Grodno province, lived most of his life in Vilna.3
  • Education – To say the GRA was a child prodigy would be an understatement, based on various reports of amazing incidents in his youth.4 From a young age, the GRA studied mainly on his own, always with great diligence and fortitude.5
  • Intellectual pursuits –
    • The GRA’s interests and teachings encompassed the entire world of Torah, both exoteric and esoteric.6
    • He studied secular subjects such as algebra, geometry, astronomy, medicine, and music theory,7 and valued such fields as providing assistance in understanding the Torah.8 In contrast, he had a rather negative view of philosophy.9
  • Occupation
    • The GRA led a life of secluded study until the age of forty,10 when he started lecturing to a group of elite Torah scholars who became his close disciples, and began assuming a communal leadership role.11
    • One of his main endeavors as a leader was to oppose the emerging Chassidic movement, and it was the GRA himself who was the main driving force behind the anti-Chassidic campaign.12
    • In practice, though not in any official capacity, the GRA became the spiritual leader of Lithuanian Jewry.
    • At some point before 1783, the GRA set out for Eretz Yisrael, intending to send for his family later. However, he never reached his destination – for unknown reasons13 – and returned to Vilna.14 Nevertheless, he famously encouraged his students to emigrate to Eretz Yisrael, and it was a group of his students and their families who comprised one of the first major waves of modern Jewish settlement in Eretz Yisrael.15
  • Family – The GRA came from a well-known rabbinical family. He married his first wife Channah around the age of eighteen. After she died in 1782, he married Gitel. He had three sons16 and four daughters, all from his first wife.17
  • Teachers – R. Moshe Margolioth of Keidany18
  • Contemporaries – R. Yonatan Eybeschuetz,19 R. Yaakov Emden, R. Yaakov Krantz (the Maggid of Dubno)20
  • Students – R. Chayyim of Volozhin, the brothers R. Menachem Mendel and R. Simchah Bunem of Shklov, R. Yisrael of Shklov,21 R. Menashe of Ilia, R. Barukh of Shklov
  • Time period – 
  • World outlook – 

Works22

  • Biblical commentaries – 
    • Much of the GRA’s biblical commentary was published under the name Aderet Eliyahu,23 with one volume covering the Pentateuch,24 and another25 including partial commentaries to Yehoshua, Shofetim, Shemuel, Melakhim, Yeshayahu,26 Yechezkel,27 Hoshea, Yonah, Nachum, Chavakkuk, Iyyov, and Divrei HaYamim, as well as a chronology of the kings, and a discussion of the description of the Third Temple in Yechezkel.
    • Commentaries to Esther,28 Rut, and Shir HaShirim,29 have been published,30 as well as commentaries to Eikhah31 and Mishlei.32 
    • A compilation of comments on the Torah, collected from all of the GRA’s works, was published as MiPerushei HaGRA Al HaTorah,33 and a similar compilation of the GRA’s comments on verses in Tehillim was published as Be’urei HaGRA LeTehillim.34 
    • Other works containing biblical commentaries by the GRA include:
      - 35ברק השחר
      - צורת הארץ לגבולותיה סביב ותכנית בית המקדש מספר מלכים ומספר יחזקאל36
      - נבואת חבקוק עם פירוש רבנו אליהו מוילנא37
      - ביאור על כ"ח עתים של קהלת ג38
      - A small section of commentary to Kohelet39
      - 40ביאור לתפילת חנה בספר שמואל
      - 41ליקוטי הגר"א מכת"י
      - 42פירוש הגר"א לתהלים קי"ד
    • There are several published lists of citations where the GRA discusses apparent biblical synonyms – see the list published in Barak Hashachar (see above), one published as שמות הנרדפים מהגר"א43, and the list compiled by M. Tzuriel (Otzerot: 253 ff.).
  • Rabbinics – 
    • Commentaries on Rabbinic literature – Commentaries of the GRA to the Mishnah have been published under the name Shenot Eliyahu.44 The GRA also wrote commentaries and glosses45 on the Babylonian Talmud,46 the Jerusalem Talmud,47 the Midreshei Halakhah,48 parts of the Tosefta, aggadot of the Talmud,49 Seder Olam, the Minor Tractates, Pirkei DeRabbi Eliezer, Pesikta, the Haggadah50 (and Chad Gadya).
    • Halakhic codes – Be’ur HaGRA,51 and novellae on Mishneh Torah and Piskei HaRosh52
    • Kabbalah – The GRA wrote commentaries to many Kabbalistic works, including: Sefer Yetzirah,53 Sifra DeTzniuta,54 Zohar,55 Tikkunei HaZohar,56 Ra’aya Meheimna,57 and Sefer HaBahir.58
    • Other works – Iggeret HaGRA,59 Dikduk Eliyahu,60 Dikdukei Torah,61 Ayil Meshullash62
    • Responses to the works of others – 
    • Responsa – 
  • Jewish thought – 
  • Misattributed works – 

Torah Commentary

Characteristics

  • Verse by verse / Topical – 
  • Genre – 
  • Structure – 
  • Language – 
  • Peshat and derash – 

Methods

  • – 

Themes

  • – 

Textual Issues

  • Manuscripts – 
  • Printings – 
  • Textual layers – 

Sources

Significant Influences

  • Earlier Sources – 
  • Teachers – 
  • Foils – 

Occasional Usage

Possible Relationship

Impact

Later exegetes

Supercommentaries