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    The Legend of the Baal-Shem

    Posted By: IrGens
    The Legend of the Baal-Shem

    The Legend of the Baal-Shem (Mythos: The Princeton/Bollingen Series in World Mythology) by Martin Buber, translated by Maurice Friedman
    English | June 16, 2020 | ASIN: B0877XX2Z7, ISBN: 0691043892 | AZW3 | 224 pages | 0.3 MB

    The Jewish philosopher Martin Buber spoke directly to the most profound human concerns in all his works, including his discussions of Hasidism, a mystical-religious movement founded in Eastern Europe by Israel ben Eliezer, called the Baal-Shem (the Master of God's Name). Living in the first part of the eighteenth century in Podolia and Wolhynia, the Baal-Shem braved scorn and rejection from the rabbinical establishment and attracted followers from among the common people, the poor, and the mystically inclined. Here Buber offers a sensitive and intuitive account of Hasidism, followed by twenty stories about the life of the Baal-Shem. This book is the earliest and one of the most delightful of Buber's seven volumes on Hasidism and can be read not only as a collection of myth but as a key to understanding the central theme of Buber's thought: the I-Thou, or dialogical, relationship.

    "All positive religion rests on an enormous simplification of the manifold and wildly engulfing forces that invade us: it is the subduing of the fullness of existence. All myth, in contrast, is the expression of the fullness of existence, its image, its sign; it drinks incessantly from the gushing fountains of life."–Martin Buber, from the introduction