Tomer Devorah - The Palm Tree of Debora [Hebrew with English] תומר דבורה -הרמ"ק מנוקד [לשון הקודש ואנגלית]
Tomer Devorah - The Palm Tree of Debora [Hebrew with English] תומר דבורה -הרמ"ק מנוקד [לשון הקודש ואנגלית]
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📘 Product Description
Tomer Devorah
The Palm Tree of Debora
Hebrew with English
תומר דבורה -הרמ"ק מנוקד
לשון הקודש ואנגלית
Hardback
One of the greatest of all Kabbalists was Rabbi Moshe Cordovero. He was born in 1522 in Safed, the city that was soon to become famed as a center of Kabbalah. At a young age, he already gained a reputation as an extraordinary genius. Besides his knowledge in Kabbalah, he was a Talmudic scholar and philosopher of the highest rank and was widely respected in these fields. He was even one of the four to receive the special semichah-ordination from Rabbi Yaakov Beirav in 1538, along with Rabbis Yosef Caro (Cordovero's teacher in Jewish Law), Moshe of Trani , and Yosef Sagis, all of whom were much older and better known than the young prodigy.
But Rabbi Moshe's main interest was the systematization of the Kabbalah, setting it into a philosophical structure. So respected was he in this endeavor that he was the first Kabbalist honored by having the word "the" added before his initials, and even today is known as "The RaMaK."
In 1542, at the age of twenty, the Ramak heard a heavenly voice urge him to study Kabbalah with his brother-in-law, Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz (author of the L'cha Dodi prayer sung to welcome the Shabbat on Friday evening). He was thus initiated into the mysteries of the Zohar, the teachings of the seminal kabbalist and Mishnaic sage, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai. The young "Ramak" mastered the text completely. This failed to satisfy him, however, since its teachings are often vague, without discernible structure. In order to clarify them in his own mind, he began writing two books. The first was Ohr Yakar ("The Precious Light"), a voluminous commentary on the Zohar. The second, Pardes Rimonim ("Orchard of Pomegranates"), completed in 1548, secured his immortal reputation. The Pardes, as it is known, was a systemization of all Kabbalistic thought up to that time. Especially important was that in it the author reconciled many early schools with the Zohar's teachings, demonstrating the essential unity and self-consistent philosophical basis of Kabbalah.
Two other books for which the Ramak is known are Tomer Devorah ("The Palm Tree of Deborah"), in which he utilizes the Kabbalistic concepts of the Sephirot ("Divine attributes") to illuminate a system of morals and ethics, and Ohr Ne'erav, a justification of and insistence upon the importance of Kabbalah study, and an introduction to its methods.
Around 1550, the Ramak founded a Kabbalah academy in Safed, which he led for 20 or so years, until his passing. It is reported that the prophet Elijah revealed himself to him. Among his disciples were many of the luminaries of Safed, including Rabbi Eliyahu di Vidas, author of Reshit Chokhmah ("Beginning of Wisdom"), and Rabbi Chaim Vital, who later became the official recorder and disseminator of the teachings of the "holy Ari," Rabbi Itzhak Luria.
This group of mystics adhered to the methods of the author of the Zohar, and engaged in various acts of penance in order to bring about the Redemption. They would spend long hours in the fields meditating and praying, and they would visit the nearby ancient graves of different scholars of the Mishna. When the "Ari" arrived in Safed, he joined this group of Kabbalists, behaving with the utmost modesty, hoping to conceal his greatness. Only the Ramak with his pure vision realized who he was.
Before his passing in 1570, the Ramak said: "I shall soon leave this earth. Yet after my passing, someone will replace me. And even though many of that person's statements may seem to contradict mine, do not oppose him and do not argue with him, for they stem from the same source as do mine and are absolutely true. His soul is a spark of Shimon bar Yochai's, and whoever opposes him opposes the Shechinah (the Divine Presence).
Print Details
ISBN/SKU: 979-8-2956-2428-5
Trim Size: 6.000" x 9.000" (229mm x 152mm)
Paper Color: White 50
Hardback: Case Laminate
Laminate Type: Matte
Page Count: 158