The Legends of Rabbah Bar Bar Hannah with the Commentary of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hakohen Kook - Book - Rabbi Bezalel Naor

The Legends of Rabbah Bar Bar Hannah with the Commentary of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hakohen Kook

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The Legends of Rabbah Bar Bar Hannah with the Commentary of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hakohen Kook - Book - Rabbi Bezalel Naor
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The Legends of Rabbah Bar Bar Hannah with the Commentary of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Hakohen Kook

ISBN: 978-1947857278
$26.95
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DESCRIPTION

Rabbah bar Bar Hannah has been referred to as the Jewish Sinbad the Sailor. His tall tales, fifteen in all, are recorded in the Babylonian Talmud in Tractate Bava Batra (73a-74a). The particular chapter in which they are situated is named "The Seller of the Ship" ("HaMokher et ha-Sefinah"). Appropriately, these tales of seafarers (ne{utei yama) were inserted in that legal discussion, as is the wont of the Talmud to mix Aggadah with Halakhah, thus tempering law with lore and legend.

Rav Kook's commentary to the Legends first appeared in print in Jerusalem in 1984 in the second volume of his collected essays, Ma'amrei ha-Rayah. In this early work (written at age twenty-five), Rav Kook yet cites sources. Later, when his style of writing switched to "stream of consciousness," sources were eliminated. For this very reason, the commentary to the Rabbah bar Bar }annah legends is of extreme importance. Here, Rav Kook divulges the many and varied Kabbalistic sources that informed his view. We see him equally at home in the world of the Vilna Gaon and of his rival Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi. A great influence upon Rav Kook's thought was the earlier Italian mystic, Rabbi Moses Hayyim Luzzatto In Ma'amrei ha-Rayah, Rav Kook's commentary was provided by Rabbi Shlomo Aviner with brief summaries as well as an index. These are certainly helpful to the reader. The present edition is the first time in any language that the commentary of Rav Kook is presented complete with much needed explanatory notes.

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  • Book Cover Type: Paperback
  • Language: English
  • Pages: 354
  • Trim: 8x10
  • Weight: 1.56 pounds

Full Description

Rabbah bar Bar Hannah has been referred to as the Jewish Sinbad the Sailor. His tall tales, fifteen in all, are recorded in the Babylonian Talmud in Tractate Bava Batra (73a-74a). The particular chapter in which they are situated is named "The Seller of the Ship" ("HaMokher et ha-Sefinah"). Appropriately, these tales of seafarers (ne{utei yama) were inserted in that legal discussion, as is the wont of the Talmud to mix Aggadah with Halakhah, thus tempering law with lore and legend.

Rav Kook's commentary to the Legends first appeared in print in Jerusalem in 1984 in the second volume of his collected essays, Ma'amrei ha-Rayah. In this early work (written at age twenty-five), Rav Kook yet cites sources. Later, when his style of writing switched to "stream of consciousness," sources were eliminated. For this very reason, the commentary to the Rabbah bar Bar }annah legends is of extreme importance. Here, Rav Kook divulges the many and varied Kabbalistic sources that informed his view. We see him equally at home in the world of the Vilna Gaon and of his rival Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi. A great influence upon Rav Kook's thought was the earlier Italian mystic, Rabbi Moses Hayyim Luzzatto In Ma'amrei ha-Rayah, Rav Kook's commentary was provided by Rabbi Shlomo Aviner with brief summaries as well as an index. These are certainly helpful to the reader. The present edition is the first time in any language that the commentary of Rav Kook is presented complete with much needed explanatory notes.

Additional details

The Legends of Rabbah bar Bar Hannah with Rav Kook’s Commentary is a journey into the heart of Jewish mysticism, rabbinic legend, and the spiritual imagination of one of the greatest Jewish thinkers of modern times.

Rabbah bar Bar Ḥannah, an Amoraic sage of the Talmud, has long been referred to as the “Jewish Sinbad the Sailor.” His fifteen tall tales—recorded in the Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Bava Batra (73a–74a)—stand out as some of the most vivid and unusual passages in rabbinic literature. These legendary stories describe waves crowned with fire threatening to sink ships, giant fish mistaken for islands, seabirds so tall their ankles reach the ocean floor, scorpions the size of donkeys, and even encounters with the lost generation of Israelites who perished in the desert. On the surface, these tales resemble mere folklore, but within the Talmud they serve as aggadic parables, woven into halakhic discussions to balance Jewish law with Jewish lore.

Into this tapestry steps Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaKohen Kook (1865–1935), the first Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of pre-state Israel and one of the most original voices in modern Jewish philosophy. Written when Rav Kook was only twenty-five years old, his commentary to the Legends of Rabbah bar Bar Hannah offers an unparalleled view of his early mystical thought. Unlike his later works of poetic, stream-of-consciousness meditation, this youthful commentary meticulously cites its sources. Rav Kook reveals the foundations of his spiritual vision by engaging deeply with the writings of the Vilna Gaon, the Chasidic master Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, and the Italian mystic Rabbi Moshe Hayyim Luzzatto (Ramchal). By doing so, he bridges worlds often seen as opposites—Lithuanian rationalism, Chasidic spirituality, and Kabbalistic allegory—showing himself equally at home in all.

For Rav Kook, the fantastical tales of Rabbah bar Bar Hannah are not curiosities but profound allegories of exile and redemption, the struggle of faith against heresy, the dangers of materialism, and the heights of spiritual transformation. The wave that threatens to capsize the ship represents forces of disbelief; the monstrous fish embodies corrupted Torah scholarship; the seabird and antelope symbolize humanity’s yearning for transcendence and the mystery of divine love. With daring creativity, Rav Kook interprets each image as a spiritual drama, one that reveals the unity of God’s presence in both light and darkness.

This edition, translated and richly annotated by Bezalel Naor, is the first time Rav Kook’s complete commentary on these legends has appeared in English. Naor’s introduction situates the work within Rav Kook’s broader writings, while his detailed notes illuminate Rav Kook’s dense references to Kabbalah, Zohar, Ramchal, and classical rabbinic sources. The result is a volume that is both scholarly and accessible, opening Rav Kook’s profound mystical insights to a new generation of readers.

With original illustrations, a careful translation of the Talmudic text, and comprehensive notes, The Legends of Rabbah bar Bar Ḥannah with Rav Kook’s Commentary is an invitation to embark on a voyage across the turbulent seas of human existence, guided by the wisdom of the Talmud and illuminated by the mystical vision of Rav Kook.

Perfect for readers interested in: Rav Kook, Jewish mysticism, aggadah, Talmud commentary, Torah study, Kabbalah, Vilna Gaon, Chabad philosophy, Ramḥal, Jewish legends, rabbinic parables, Bezalel Naor translations, and the intersection of halakhah and aggadah.

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