Jump to content

Draft:Aaron Samuel Tamares

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2620:6e:6000:3100:711a:bad5:434c:6a8 (talk) at 05:58, 19 November 2024 (Submitting using AfC-submit-wizard). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rabbi
Aaron Samuel Tamares
הרב אהרן שמואל בן משה יעקב תמרת
Aaron Samuel Tamares
Born1869
Died1931
Other namesAḥad ha-Rabanim ha-Margishim
EducationKovno Kollel, Volozhin Yeshiva
OccupationRabbi
SpouseRachel
ChildrenMiriam, Zirka, Shlomo, David, Hannah, Rivkah Perelis
FatherMoshe Ya'akov Tamares

Aaron Samuel Tamares (Hebrew: אהרן שמואל תמרת Aharon Shmuel Tamares, sometimes Tamaret; 1869 – 1931) was an Ashkenazi Jewish Orthodox Rabbi, author, and philosopher, most notable for voicing a pacifist opposition to the mainstream Zionist movement. He often wrote under the pen name Aḥad ha-Rabanim ha-Margishim ("one of the passionate rabbis").

Biography

Early life

Tamares was born in 1969 in a shtetl called Malech, in Grodno, within the Pale of Settlement. His father, Moshe Ya'akov Tamares, owned a tavern and was the grandson of a well-known tzadik known as Maltsher Preacher, Reb Arehle. He began studying in the cheder from a young age, and soon became regarded as a prodigy. At the age of 19, he left to study in Kovno at the famed Kollel Perushim, followed by two years at the Volozhin Yeshiva.[1]

Marriage and children

He was originally set to marry the eldest daughter of the Chief Rabbi of Milejczyce, but she unexpectedly passed away before the marriage went through. He instead married her younger sister, Rachel, at the age of 17, with whom he would go on to have six children. Three of his children would ultimately immigrate to Mandatory Palestine, while the other three were killed in Treblinka after his death. His children, including daughters, were highly educated in the Bible, Mishnah, and even Talmud.[2]

Career

In 1893, he replaced his father in law as the Chief Rabbi of Milejczyce, which is a position he would retain throughout his life.[3] Tamares was an early defender of Zionism, standing against the prevailing Haredi opposition. In 1900, he was an elected delegate at the fourth Zionist Congress in London. There, he seemingly became disillusioned with the movement. In 1905, Hayim Nahman Bialik and S. Boriskhin published his Sefer ha-yahadut veha-ḥerut, which argued for a justice-centered Judaism and against what he viewed as a non-Jewish nationalism that was dominant in the movement. He continued to write for the next decades, both in his own books as well as in journals and newspapers like HaMelitz and Ha-Tsfira. In 1912, he was invited by Chaim Tchernowitz to take over the latter's yeshiva in Odesa, although he declined the offer.[4]

Death

He died in 1931 at the age of 62, and was eulogized by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency as a "champion of Zionism and of world peace."[5]

Philosophical and political views

Tamares was most well known for his criticisms of mainstream Zionism along several different fronts:

From a young age, Tamares was sharply critical of the glamorization of violence and militarism. As a child, he railed against portraits of soldiers being on display in the home. In kollel, he was noted for his anti-war preaching, arguing that war consisted of "taking people from their homes, against their will, and setting them in front of the firing cannons [...] This is the pinnacle of dread against which a special struggle must be initiated."[6] This belief in particular became essential to his system in the years following World War I, and the destruction that that wrought on Europe and on European Jewry in particular.[4] This commitment to non-violence included a general opposition to violent revolution.[6]

While Tamares was certainly sympathetic to socialist ideas, especially their anti-war tendency, he gradually came to harshly oppose Marxism. This both for the pacifist reasons mentioned above as well as for more abstract reasons. He argued that "Marxism was a food that was too dry, he desired a socialism of the heart, not a socialism of numbers" and that it "sought to replace one ruling class for another."[6]

Tamares offered a radical Jewish critique of nationalism, going well beyond other Satmar-style anti-Zionism. He opposed national projects not merely out of a concern for the Messianic implications of Jewish autonomy in Palestine, but out of a broader political-theological concern. He argued that even the great Kings of Israel and Judah, such as David and Solomon, being monarchs, were spiritually corrupting. The Destruction of the Temples, then, offered an opportunity to overcome statist illusions and shift Judaism into a personal religion, which had greater potential than that of the First Commonwealth.[7]

The Role of Exile

Tamares argued that the long Galut, or Jewish exile and dispersion to the diaspora, had a necessary rectifying effect on the Jewish People. The Medieval and Modern worlds had created spiritual hardships of war and nationalism. The Jews, in their powerlessness, were spared from having to wield violence or act as national players on the world stage. In their victimization, they also were meant to learn what it means to be oppressed and the great need for universal social justice and peace. Jews, he argued, had a greater freedom in statelessness to maintain their moral compass and reject corrupting influence. Thus, secular aims to "force the end" missed the whole point.[6]

Two Kinds of Evil

Tamares distinguishes between two kinds of evil. The first of these is a natural inclination, an "animal urge," to do violence in a moment of passion, knowing it is wrong. Another, more insidious evil, comes from the corrupting influence of a corrupt society. When one is engaged in the latter, not only is one more likely to commit immoral acts, they will be unable to see that such acts are immoral. Such evil "walks upright in the streets of the city and struts about without meeting any opposition."[7]

Published works

See also

References/Notes and references

  1. ^ "Pruzhany, Belarus (Pages 509-510)". www.jewishgen.org. Retrieved 2024-11-14.
  2. ^ "Rivkah Perelis". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 2024-11-14.
  3. ^ "Tamares, Aaron Samuel | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2024-11-14.
  4. ^ a b "The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe". encyclopedia.yivo.org. Retrieved 2024-11-18.
  5. ^ "Death of Polish Rabbi Who Was Champion of Zionism and of World Peace". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1931-08-13. Retrieved 2024-11-14.
  6. ^ a b c d Wolkenfeld, David (September 2016). "Pacifism, the Jewish Mission, and Religious Anti-Zionism: Rabbi Aaron Samuel Tamares in Context" (PDF). Yeshivat Chovevei Torah. Retrieved November 18, 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ a b Rothman, Hayyim (June 1, 2021). "Aaron Shmuel Tamaret". No Masters But God: Portraits of Anarcho-Judaism. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9781526149022.