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The Holy Ari
Rabbi Yitzchak Luria was undisputedly the greatest
practitioner and expounder of Kabbala since Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, author of
the Zohar. Rabbi Yitzchak Luria founded a new school in Kabbalistic
thought, known as "the system of the Ari."
Rabbi Yitzchak Luria ben Shlomo Ashkenazi, whose
father was related to the famous Maharshal, was born in the Old City of
Jerusalem in 5294 (1534) in what is now the Old Yishuv Court Museum, and passed
away on the 5th of Av 5332 (1572 CE). He is buried
in the Old Cemetery of Safed, where tens of thousands make the pilgrimage to his
graveside every year.
Rabbi Yitzchak Luria is commonly known as the Ari, an
acronym standing for Elo-ki Rabbi Yitzchak, the G-dly Rabbi Isaac. No
other master or sage ever had this extra letter aleph, an abbreviation
for Elo-ki [G--dly] prefacing his name. This
was a sign of the esteem in which his contemporaries held him. Later
generations, fearful that this appellation might be misunderstood, substituted
Ashkenazi, his family name, for the aleph, indicating that his family had
originated in Germany, as indeed it had. Alternatively, some explain that the
aleph stands for Adoneinu, "our master." To this day among
Kabbalists, Rabbi Yitzchak Luria is only referred to as Rabbeinu HaAri,
HaAri HaKadosh (the holy Ari), the Ari (which also means
"lion"), or the Arizal (the Ari, of blessed memory). The following story is told about the birth of the
Arizal:
There was once a very pious scholar living in Israel,
named Rabbi Shlomo Luria... One day he remained in the Study Hall alone,
learning, when Elijah the Prophet appeared to him and said, "I have been sent
to you by the Almighty to bring you tidings that your wife shall conceive and
bear a child, and that you must call him Yitzchak (Isaac). He shall begin to
deliver Israel from the kelipot [husks, forces of evil]. Through him
numerous souls will receive their tikun (rectification). He is also
destined to reveal many hidden mysteries in the Torah and to expound on the
Zohar. His fame will spread throughout the world. Take care therefore that
you not circumcise him before I come to be the Sandak [who holds the
child during the circumcision ceremony]."
He finished speaking and disappeared. Rabbi Shlomo
Luria went home but did not reveal this secret to anyone, even his to wife. When
the Ari was born, the house was filled with light, and on the eighth day, he was
brought to the synagogue to be circumcised. His father searched everywhere to
see if Elijah had come as promised, but he did not see him. Everyone was urging
the father to proceed, but he replied that not all the guests had yet arrived.
An hour went by, but Elijah still did not come. Then
he thought bitterly to himself: My sins must have prevented him from fulfilling
his promise. But as he was crying, Elijah appeared and said, "Do not cry,
servant of Hashem. Draw near unto the altar and offer your son as a pure
sacrifice dedicated entirely to Heaven. Sit on my chair and I shall sit upon
you." Whereupon, invisible to everyone present except Rabbi Shlomo, Elijah sat
on his lap, received the child with both hands and held him during the entire
circumcision. Neither the mohel nor those assembled saw anything but the
father holding his baby. After the circumcision, he again promised Rabbi Shlomo
that the child would bring great light to the entire world, and then he
disappeared.
When the Ari was still a child, Rabbi Shlomo passed
away. In 1541, unable to support the family, the Ari's mother, with her family,
traveled to Egypt, where the family lived with her brother, Mordechai Frances, a
wealthy tax collector. The boy's brilliance continued to shine in pilpul
[Talmudic dialectic] and logic. Rabbi David ben Zimra (Radbaz)
taught the Ari both the revealed and concealed aspects of the Torah. The Ari
also studied under Rabbi Betzalel Ashkenazi, the author of Shittah Mekubetzet.
By the time the Ari was fifteen, his expertise in
Talmud had equaled or surpassed that of all the sages in Egypt. At this age, he
married his uncle's daughter, and then spent the next six years in intensive
study with Rabbi Betzalel Ashkenazi. It was around this time that a copy of one
volume of the Zohar came into his hands. He studied the Zohar in
seclusion for another six years. He then isolated himself completely in house
near the Nile for another two years. He remained alone, not speaking to any
human being throughout the week. He would return home on the eve of Shabbat,
just before dark. But even at home, he would not utter a word, even to his wife.
When it was absolutely necessary for him to say something, he would say it in
the least possible number of words, and then, he would speak only in the Holy
language--Hebrew. The Ari and his wife had a number of children, including a son
named Moshe, who passed away at a young age, and a daughter, who married the son
of Rabbi Yosef Caro. Details are sketchy regarding his other children.
He continued to progress in this manner until he was
worthy of Divine inspiration ( Ruach HaKodesh). On numerous occasions,
Elijah the prophet revealed himself and taught the Ari the mysteries of the
Torah. Every night his soul ascended into the heavenly realms. Troops of angels
would greet him to safeguard his way, bringing him to the heavenly academies.
These angels would ask him which academy he chose to visit. Sometimes it would
be that of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, and other times he would visit the heavenly
academies of Rabbi Akiva or Rabbi Eliezer the Great. On occasion he would also
visit the heavenly academies of the ancient prophets.
In 5330 (1570 CE), after he had attained an extremely
exalted rung of holiness in Egypt, Elijah told him the time had come to move to
Safed, a city in the Galilee in the north of Israel. There, he would meet Rabbi
Chaim Vital, the man to whom he was destined to transmit the keys to the ancient
knowledge.
When he first arrived in Safed, the Ari zal
joined the circle of students who studied Kabbala under Rabbi Moshe Cordovero ( Ramak).
His discipleship was short-lived for the Ramak passed on soon afterwards.
After the passing of the Ramak, the Ari began
teaching Kabbala. The Radbaz, who had also settled in Safed, warned him not to
teach Kabbala in public. However, later the Radbaz recanted, after receiving a
sign from Heaven that he had erred in his ruling. (Some say that Elijah the
prophet himself visited the Radbaz and revealed to him that he had erred). Soon
a group of the leading kabbalists in Safed gathered around him, among them Rabbi
Chaim Vital, who became his chief disciple.
Rabbi Chaim Vital writes in the Introduction to
Shaar HaHakdamot:
The Ari overflowed with Torah. He was thoroughly
expert in Scripture, Mishnah, Talmud, Pilpul, Midrash, Agada, Maaseh
Bereishit and Maaseh Merkava. He was expert in the language of trees,
the language of birds, and the speech of angels. He could read faces in the
manner outlined in the Zohar (vol. II, p. 74b). He could discern all that
any individual had done, and could see what they would do in the future. He
could read people's thoughts, often before the thought even entered their mind.
He knew future events, was aware of everything happening here on earth, and what
was decreed in heaven.
He knew the mysteries of gilgul
[ reincarnation], who had been born previously, and who was here for the first
time. He could look at a person and tell him how he was connected to higher
spiritual levels, and his original root in Adam. The Ari could read wondrous
things [about people] in the light of a candle or in the flame of a fire. With
his eyes he gazed and was able to see the souls of the righteous, both those who
had died recently and those who had lived in ancient times. Together/from these
departed souls, he studied the true mysteries.
From a person's scent, he was able to know all that
he had done. (See Zohar, Yenuka vol. III p. 188a). It was as if
the answers to all these mysteries lay dormant within him, waiting to be
activated whenever he desired. He did not have to seclude himself to seek them
out.
All this we saw with our own eyes. These are not
things that we heard from others. They were wondrous things that had not been
seen on earth since the time of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai. None of this was
attained through magic, heaven forbid. There is a strong prohibition against
these arts. Instead, it came automatically, as a result of his saintliness and
asceticism, after many years of study in both the ancient and the newer
Kabbalistic texts. He then increased his piety, asceticism, purity and holiness
until he reached a level where Elijah would constantly reveal himself to him,
speaking to him "mouth to mouth," teaching him these secrets. The Arizal himself wrote relatively little.
From his own hand we have novellae on two Talmudic tractates. These have
been included in his teacher's "Shittah Mekubetzet." His writings in
Kabbala were included in Rabbi Chaim Vital's Etz Chaim and are marked by
Rabbi Chaim with the preface "found written in manuscript." There is also a
commentary on a small section of the Zohar and a few hymns for the
Sabbath from the master himself. The bulk of his teachings were recorded by his
disciples, in numerous works, primarily by Rabbi Chaim Vital. His disciples also
recorded his customs in a work known as " Shulchan Aruch HaAri"
published in Venice 5440 (1680 CE).
The teachings of the Ari were afforded the status of a Rishon [primary authority]. Every
custom of the Ari was scrutinized, and many were accepted, even against previous
practice. The Magen Avraham (Rabbi Avraham Gombiner, 5395-5443 /
1635-1683 CE) accepts many of the Ari's customs as legally binding. In deciding
disputes that had remained unresolved for centuries, he often cites the Ari's
custom as the final authority. Included in the main students of the Ari are Rabbi Chaim Vital (Calabrese), Rabbi Yisrael Sarug,
Rabbi Shmuel Ozida (author of Midrash Shmuel), Rabbi Yitzchak Cohen,
Rabbi Masud HaMaaravi, and Rabbi Gedalia. Even among these select few, only Rabbi Chaim Vital was permitted in his master's lifetime to write down the Ari's teachings.
Visitor Comments: 2
,4/15/2007
I have been overcome with a deJerry Erickson, from USA, California, Lomita, 1/13/2006
I find the all the write ups a
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