Difference between revisions of "Commentators:R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)/0"
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<li><b>Dates</b> – 1809-1879</li> | <li><b>Dates</b> – 1809-1879</li> | ||
<li><b>Location</b> – Malbim was born in Volochysk, Volhynia, and lived in Wreschen (Posen), Breslau, Kempen, Bucharest, Paris, Lencziza (Russian Poland), Kherson, Moghilef, and Konigsberg. He also traveled widely throughout Europe.</li> | <li><b>Location</b> – Malbim was born in Volochysk, Volhynia, and lived in Wreschen (Posen), Breslau, Kempen, Bucharest, Paris, Lencziza (Russian Poland), Kherson, Moghilef, and Konigsberg. He also traveled widely throughout Europe.</li> | ||
− | <li><b>Occupation</b> – Malbim served in rabbinic positions in many locations throughout Europe.<fn>See above, Location.</fn> During his nineteen year tenure in Kempen,<fn>Beginning in 1840.</fn> Malbim learned German and began studying the sciences, logic, philosophy (with a special interest in Kant), history, and geography.<fn>See Schaechter, Malbim: 12.</fn> While serving in Bucharest, Malbim’s efforts to set halakhic standards and encourage his congregants to become more observant, and his fervent opposition to Reform Judaism, raised the ire of wealthy community leaders. These leaders made false accusations leading to Malbim’s imprisonment and then expulsion from Romania. Similar | + | <li><b>Occupation</b> – </li> |
+ | <ul> | ||
+ | <li>Malbim served in rabbinic positions in many locations throughout Europe.<fn>See above, Location.</fn></li> | ||
+ | <li>During his nineteen year tenure in Kempen,<fn>Beginning in 1840.</fn> Malbim learned German and began studying the sciences, logic, philosophy (with a special interest in Kant), history, and geography.<fn>See Schaechter, Malbim: 12.</fn></li> | ||
+ | <li>While serving in Bucharest, Malbim’s efforts to set halakhic standards and encourage his congregants to become more observant, and his fervent opposition to Reform Judaism, raised the ire of wealthy community leaders. These leaders made false accusations leading to Malbim’s imprisonment and then expulsion from Romania.</li> | ||
+ | <li>Similar acrimonious disputes occurred in other locations where Malbim served as rabbi, as Malbim continued to stand on principle, defend Orthodoxy, and oppose Reform through his communal leadership and literary activity.</li> | ||
+ | </ul> | ||
<li><b>Family</b> – Malbim’s father died when he was six years old, and his mother remarried to R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk. Malbim married at the age of 14, and fathered a son and daughter, but divorced soon after. In 1838, he married the daughter of R. Hayyim Auerbach of Leczyca. His son, Aharon, tragically died in 1862.</li> | <li><b>Family</b> – Malbim’s father died when he was six years old, and his mother remarried to R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk. Malbim married at the age of 14, and fathered a son and daughter, but divorced soon after. In 1838, he married the daughter of R. Hayyim Auerbach of Leczyca. His son, Aharon, tragically died in 1862.</li> | ||
<li><b>Teachers</b> – R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk, R. Moshe Halevi Horowitz,<fn>Head of the Volochysk rabbinical court.</fn> R. Aryeh Leib Tzintz, R. Tzvi Hirsch Eichenstein of Zhydachiv.<fn>A prominent Hassidic rebbe, with whom Malbim studied Kabbalah.</fn></li> | <li><b>Teachers</b> – R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk, R. Moshe Halevi Horowitz,<fn>Head of the Volochysk rabbinical court.</fn> R. Aryeh Leib Tzintz, R. Tzvi Hirsch Eichenstein of Zhydachiv.<fn>A prominent Hassidic rebbe, with whom Malbim studied Kabbalah.</fn></li> |
Version as of 12:54, 28 July 2015
R. Meir Leibush Weiser (Malbim)
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Name | R. Meir Leibush b. Yechiel Michel Weiser, Malbim ר' מאיר ליבוש בן יחיאל מיכל וייזר, מלבי"ם |
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Dates | 1809-1879 |
Location | Russia / Romania |
Works | Commentary on most of Tanakh, Yair Or, Eretz Chemdah, Artzot HaShalom, Artzot HaChayyim |
Exegetical Characteristics | |
Influenced by | |
Impacted on |
Background1
Life
- Name –
- Hebrew name – רבי מאיר לייבוש בן יחיאל מיכל וייזר, known by the acronym מלבי"ם
- _ name –
- Dates – 1809-1879
- Location – Malbim was born in Volochysk, Volhynia, and lived in Wreschen (Posen), Breslau, Kempen, Bucharest, Paris, Lencziza (Russian Poland), Kherson, Moghilef, and Konigsberg. He also traveled widely throughout Europe.
- Occupation –
- Malbim served in rabbinic positions in many locations throughout Europe.2
- During his nineteen year tenure in Kempen,3 Malbim learned German and began studying the sciences, logic, philosophy (with a special interest in Kant), history, and geography.4
- While serving in Bucharest, Malbim’s efforts to set halakhic standards and encourage his congregants to become more observant, and his fervent opposition to Reform Judaism, raised the ire of wealthy community leaders. These leaders made false accusations leading to Malbim’s imprisonment and then expulsion from Romania.
- Similar acrimonious disputes occurred in other locations where Malbim served as rabbi, as Malbim continued to stand on principle, defend Orthodoxy, and oppose Reform through his communal leadership and literary activity.
- Family – Malbim’s father died when he was six years old, and his mother remarried to R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk. Malbim married at the age of 14, and fathered a son and daughter, but divorced soon after. In 1838, he married the daughter of R. Hayyim Auerbach of Leczyca. His son, Aharon, tragically died in 1862.
- Teachers – R. Yehudah Leib of Volochysk, R. Moshe Halevi Horowitz,5 R. Aryeh Leib Tzintz, R. Tzvi Hirsch Eichenstein of Zhydachiv.6
- Contemporaries – Malbim’s life and career (mostly in Eastern Europe) largely overlapped with those of R. Samson Raphael Hirsch in Germany, and R. Shemuel David Luzzatto (Shadal) in Italy. Other contemporaries include Chatam Sofer,7 and R. Shelomo Zalman Tiktin of Breslau.8
- Students –
- Time period – Malbim’s rabbinic career spanned a period when Reform and Haskalah, after having become dominant in Western Europe, began making serious inroads into Eastern Europe. Malbim was living in Breslau in 1838 when the community split into Reform and Orthodox factions, with Abraham Geiger leading the reformers.9
Works
- Biblical commentaries – Malbim authored commentaries on the entire Bible except for Eikhah and Kohelet.10 He also authored the work Ayyelet HaShachar, laying out the principles of linguistic usage and the interpretation of verbs and synonyms underlying Rabbinic exegesis,11 as well as a work devoted exclusively to interpretation of synonyms, Yair Or.12 Eretz Chemdah13 and Artzot HaShalom14 are collections of sermons on the Torah.
- Rabbinics –
- Jewish thought – Mashal UMelitzah,17 Alim LeTerufah18
- Other works – Yesodei Chokhmat HaHiggayon,19 Autobiography20
- Commonly misattributed to –
Torah Commentary
Characteristics
- Verse by verse / Topical –
- Genre –
- Structure –
- Language –
Methods
- –
Themes
- –
Textual Issues
- Manuscripts –
- Printings –
- Textual layers –
Sources
Significant Influences
- Earlier Sources –
- Teachers –
- Foils –