AVIGDOR BEN JOSEPH ḤAYYIM
- AVIGDOR BEN JOSEPH ḤAYYIM
- AVIGDOR BEN JOSEPH ḤAYYIM (18th–19th
centuries), rabbi in Poland, one of the leading opponents of
Ḥasidism in Poland-Lithuania in the late 18th
century. In 1785 he became rabbi of Pinsk and its district, but through
the influence of the Ḥasidim he was dismissed in 1794, two years before
the end of his term. He lodged a complaint with the civil courts,
claiming the balance of his salary and damages resulting from loss of
office. He also took up the matter with government officials in St.
Petersburg. During the six years of embittered litigation with the
leaders of the community, Avigdor embarked on a campaign of denunciation
against Ḥasidism. He lodged a second complaint in 1800 with the office
of Czar Paul I containing charges against Ḥasidism in
which he brought arguments from Scripture to prove that it was a
heretical sect in conflict with the accepted values of religion,
morality, and the laws of the state, and that it continued to adhere to
the beliefs of the pseudo-messiah, Shabbetai Ẓevi . When, on
investigation, the authorities failed to find anything exceptional in
the behavior of the Ḥasidim, Avigdor did not relax his efforts and as a
result of his denunciations shneur zalman of Lyady, the founder of
Ḥabad Ḥasidism, was reimprisoned. Avigdor subsequently drew up 19
questions accusing Shneur Zalman, in which he continued to denounce the
Ḥasidim as disloyal both to the state and to Judaism. In December 1800
he lodged another accusation before the government in which he cited
extracts from Shneur Zalman's
Sefer ha-Tanya, in an attempt to prove that Ḥasidism was
inimical to Christianity.
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Z.W. Rabinowitsch, Ha-Ḥasidut ha-Lita'it (1961), 39–47,
51–55; Dubnow, Ḥasidut, 265–78; M. Teitelbaum, Ha-Rav mi-Lyady
u-Mifleget Ḥabad (1914), 90–121, 185–202; Ḥ.M. Hilman, Beit
Rabbi (1965), 54–60 (Arabic numerals).
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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