תיקון הפרדוקס: יוסף וייס, גרשם שלום ופרשת הדוקטורט האבוד על ר' נחמן מברסלב

Translated title of the contribution: Tiqqun ha-Paradox: Joseph G. Weiss, Gershom Scholem, and the Lost Dissertation on R. Nahman of Bratslav

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Joseph G. Weiss (1918–1969) arrived in Jerusalem from Budapest in December 1939 and enrolled at the Hebrew University, where he studied Jewish history, Jewish philosophy, Kabbalah, and general philosophy. He attended lectures by Julius Guttmann, Shmuel Hugo Bergmann, Yitzhak Baer, Gershom Scholem, and others. Weiss initially intended to study the medieval poetry of the Jews of Spain, and even wrote several articles on Hebrew literature, yet he quickly drew close to Scholem and the study of Kabbalah. He adopted a rather critical attitude toward developments in Palestine and appears to have refrained from political engagement at this time, notwithstanding the Zionist fervor in the spirit of Martin Buber that brought him to Palestine in the first place. He received his M.A. from the Faculty of the Humanities in 1947 and proceeded to write a doctoral dissertation under Scholem’s supervision, at first on R. Nahman of Bratslav and subsequently on the Baal Shem Tov. The complicated history of the dissertation on dialectical faith in the teachings of R. Nahman that he submitted in 1950 has long been shrouded in mystery, circumstances that have given rise to spurious claims made by journalists and scholars alike who have sought to portray Scholem in a certain light. One such rumor, which is utterly devoid of any basis in fact, claims that Scholem compelled Weiss to leave Jerusalem for London due to his refusal to accept the dissertation. Others have read the affair as a sort of mythological struggle between two research approaches: historical- philological versus spiritual-existential, an interpretation that is far removed from reality. The events, it seems, served as fertile ground for scholars in search of an imaginary anchor for their own ideas, a smokescreen for a new approach. A significant breakthrough came with Noam Zadoff’s publication of an important selection of Scholem and Weiss’s correspondence, which sheds light on several key issues. With that, a complete account of the dissertation, presented in its full context (not to mention developments over the years in Weiss’s approach to the study of Bratslav Hasidism), has not been provided to this date, and is presented here for the first time. New material from the Schocken Library archive, the Central Archive for the History of the Jewish People, the archive of the Hebrew University, and various archives held at the National Library of Israel, including the voluminous correspondence between Weiss and his friend Samuel Miklos Stern, allow us to present a far broader and more accurate picture of the events. This is a significant contribution not only to the study of Scholem and Weiss, but to the history of Jewish Studies at the Hebrew University as a whole.
Translated title of the contributionTiqqun ha-Paradox: Joseph G. Weiss, Gershom Scholem, and the Lost Dissertation on R. Nahman of Bratslav
Original languageHebrew
Pages (from-to)151-206
Number of pages56
Journalמחשבת ישראל
Volume4
StatePublished - 2022

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