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In [[Kabbalah]] and [[Europe]]an [[Jewish folklore]], a '''dybbuk'''  is a malicious [[spiritual possession|possessing]] [[spiritual being|spirit]], believed to be the dislocated [[soul]] of a dead person.<ref>[http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/article-9363281/dybbuk Dubbuk] at [http://concise.britannica.com concise.britannica.com]</ref> Dybbuks are said to have escaped from [[Gehenna]], a Hebrew term very loosely translated as "[[hell]]," or to have been turned away from Gehenna for transgressions too serious for the soul to be allowed there, such as [[suicide]]. The word "dybbuk" is derived from the [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] דיבוק, meaning "attachment"; the dybbuk attaches itself to the body of a living person and inhabits it. According to belief, a soul that has not been able to fulfill its function in its lifetime is given another opportunity to do so in the form of a dybbuk. It will leave once it has accomplished its goal, sometimes after being [[Exorcism#Exorcism in Judaism|helped]].
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{{images OK}}{{submitted}}{{approved}}{{copyedited}}
==In Jewish folklore==
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[[Image:HANA ROVINA THE DYBBUK 1920.jpg|thumb|300px|Actress Hana Rovina portrays a possessed woman in ''The Dybbuk'']]
While belief in evil spirits, possession, and exorcism goes back to ancient times, a widespread belief in dybbuks became evident especially in the sixteenth and seventeenth century. The kabbalist [[Isaac Luria]] (1534–72), helped popularize the work with his writings on the correlation between the physical and spiritual worlds and the cooperation of spiritual beings with humans on earth. Luria described this relationship as a method by which imperfect souls could cooperate with men on earth to attain spiritual perfection. However, other kabbalistic writers took the teaching to its logical conclusion with the idea of a dybbuk—an unenlightened or wandering soul—attaching itself to the body of a human being on earth. The word "dybbuk" is related to the the Hebrew term "to cleave" or "to cling."
 
  
and surprisingly, having a dybbuk is not always a bad thing for the human host. However, sometimes having a dybbuk is a very bad thing.
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In [[Kabbalah]] and [[Europe]]an [[Jewish]] [[folklore]], a '''dybbuk'''  is a [[spiritual being|spirit]] of a dead person that attaches itself to a person on earth. The word "dybbuk" is derived from a [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] term meaning "attachment."
  
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According to [[kabbalah|kabbalistic]] tradition, a [[soul]] that has not been able to fulfill its function in its lifetime is sometimes given another opportunity to do so in the form of a dybbuk. Dybbuks seek out people who face similar challenges or circumstances to themselves and attach themselves to their bodies. Dybbuks are said to have escaped from [[Gehenna]], the Jewish [[purgatory]], or even to have been turned away from Gehenna for transgressions too serious for the soul to be allowed entrance, such as [[suicide]]. A good spirit or ''ibbur'' may also possess a person for a while, but will leave of its own accord once it has accomplished a goal of mutual benefit with its host. An evil dybbuk, however, often leaves only after being satisfied or [[Exorcism|exorcised]].
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{{toc}}
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While Jewish tradition regarding good and evil spiritual influences on living humans dates back to ancient times, fascination with dybbuks became particularly widespread in Jewish culture of the sixteenth century and later. In 1914, Jewish playwright [[S. Ansky]] wrote a significant [[Yiddish]] play called ''The Dybbuk''. The story relates the plight of a young bride possessed by a dybbuk on the eve of her wedding. [[Leonard Bernstein]] later composed a [[ballet]] based on Ansky's play. Although belief in dybbuks has diminished in recent times, in some Jewish communities their existence is considered a reality. Some [[rabbi]]s still engage in [[exorcism]] rituals to help free people thought to be afflicted with a dybbuk.
  
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==Ancient background==
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[[File:Dybbuk.jpg|thumb|400px|''Dybbuk'', by Ephraim Moshe Lilien (1874–1925)]]
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While stories of evil spirits and [[exorcism]] are relatively rare in the [[Old Testament]], a famous instance of spirit possession is related in the story of [[King Saul]], who was possessed by an "evil spirit form [[yahweh|the Lord]]" after losing God's support as king. According to 1 Samuel 16:23 "Whenever the evil spirit from God came upon Saul, [[David]] would take his [[harp]] and play. Then relief would come to Saul; he would feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him." In the apocryphal [[Book of Tobit]], a beautiful bride name Sarah is plagued by a [[demon]] who has killed all seven or her husbands on her wedding night. She is finally liberated after the angel [[Raphael]] instructs Tobit (Tobias) to marry Sarah and drive away the demon by burning a fish's liver and heart.
  
In the Old Testament of the Bible, in the Book of Samuel (18:10), a bad spirit is briefly described as attaching itself to King Saul, the first king elected chieftain of the ancient tribes of Israel: "And it came to pass on the morrow, that the evil spirit from God came upon Saul..." Later in the Bible, in the Book of Kings, the prophet Elijah is possessed by the spirit of a dead man who is trying to get the prophet to trick the King into going to war when he wasn't supposed to. Winkler said, "You have stories like that, that just nonchalantly mention spirits of people who have left us coming down to effect some change, some phenomenon in this world."
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Exorcisms were also done at [[Qumran]] by the [[Essene]] branch of Judaism. [[Jesus of Nazareth]] was a powerful Jewish healer and [[exorcism|exorcist]], as evil spirits were believed to be the source of much illness. Jewish sources report exorcisms being done in the first century C.E. by administering drugs with poisonous root extracts or by offering sacrifices (Josephus, "B. J." vii. 6, § 3; Sanh. 65b).
  
Rabbi Winkler has a unique perspective on dybbuk and other Jewish folklore. Though the kinds of things he's writing and teaching about may not be discussed in your local synagogue, Winkler explains how ghosts and spirits are definitely part of Judaism. Winkler said, "Our scriptures and our mystical tradition are full of ghosts — ghosts meaning the disembodied soul still wandering around. We also have teachings about what in English they call "demons," but they're not all evil — they're called 'sheydim' in Hebrew. There are good demons and bad demons. According to our ancient tradition, demons are beings just like we are, just like animals are. They were created in the twilight of creation after the human being was created, right before the climax of creation, so that they're neither of this world, nor of the other world, but little bit of both. There are teachings about how our ancestors like King Solomon dabbled in demonology, and he learned a lot of sorcery mysteries from the famous head of all the demons, Ashmedai."
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==Talmudic and kabbalistic tradition==
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While not denying the influence of spirits, [[Pharisaism]] insisted that the observance of the [[Torah|Law]] was the best defense against [[demon]]s (Ber. 5a; Num. 48b). In addition, the ''[[tefillin]]'' were regarded by some Jews as [[amulet]]s of protection (Targ. Cant. viii. 3; Gen. R. xxxv.; Men. 33b). Protection against evil spirits was also provided by the posting of a [[mezuzah]] at the door of one's home and the reading of certain prayers such as the [[Shema]].  
  
So how does a dybbuk take hold of a person? Winkler said, "The dybbuk is drawn to someone who is in the state where their soul and their body are not fully connected with each other because of severe melancholy, psychosis, stuff like that — where you're not integrated. It seeks a particular person who in their current lifetime is going through what the possessing spirit went through, and so the possessing spirit is drawn to compatibility — to someone who is struggling with the same thing it did. Let's say in my heart I have a desire to rob all convenience stores, but I don't follow through because I don't have the guts. The spirit of someone who has actually done it will be drawn to my desire to do it and will possess me because we're compatible."
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A Talmudic injunction affirms the presence of both good an evil spirits in human affairs: "The wicked are accompanied by the angels of [[Satan]]; the righteous by the angels of God" (Tosef., Shab. xvii. 2-3; compare [[Book of Jubilees]], x. 6). "Every observance of the Law is a protection" (Soṭah 21a), and those bent upon doing some sacred work need fear no evil powers (Pes. 8b). A [[kohen|priest]]'s blessing also is a protection against malign influences (Num. R. xi).
  
Giving in to your bad inclinations doesn't necessarily mean you are victim of a dybbuk. A true possession does have specific signs. Winkler explained, "You can tell it is real if the person is capable of speaking things that they would not otherwise be capable of knowing. Because the soul that's in them is not integrated with them enough to be subject to time, space, and matter, they would be able to tell you things they would ordinarily not know — like what you dreamed last night, what's happening across the street, maybe they can even speak a separate language that they've never known before." If this kind of bad possession takes hold, the solution is exorcism.
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The reality of [[demon]]s was never questioned by the Talmudists and most other rabbinic commentators. [[halakha|Jewish law]] accepted them as a fact (see [[Shulchan Aruch]], Oraḥ Ḥayyim, 4, 2 et seq). Nor did most of the medieval Jewish thinkers question their reality. Only the philosophers [[Maimonides]] and [[Ibn Ezra]] denied their existence.
  
The Jewish exorcism ritual is performed by a rabbi who has mastered practical Kabbalah. The ceremony involves a quorum of 10 people who gather in a circle around the possessed person. The group recites Psalm 91 three times, and the rabbi blows the shofar — a ram's horn. Rabbi Winkler has performed four exorcisms in his life so far. He said, "We blow the ram's horn in a certain way, with certain notes, in effect to shatter the body, so to speak. So that the soul who is possessing will be shaken loose. After it has been shaken loose, we can begin to communicate with it and ask it what it is here for. We can pray for it and do a ceremony for it to enable it to feel safe and finished so that it can leave the person's body."
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As early as [[geonim|geonic times]] (sixth through eleventh centuries C.E.) a special incantatory formula was recited before drinking from the cup of the [[Sabbath]] wine against "the demon Puta, the prince of forgetfulness." It commanded "by the power of the holy names of the angels Arimaz, Arimas, Ansisel, and Petahel, he may be cast upon the high mountains [[Alburz]]" ("Seder Rab Amram," i. 31). Many rites and prayer formulas were introduced to avert the malign influence of evil spirits, and special formulas for the dying were prescribed in the [[Kabbalah]] by which all the demons that may have been created or attracted by the impure thoughts and actions of the dying person, brought under control. [[Amulet]]a, incantations, prayers, and other formulas became widespread. Women were sometimes banned from going to a [[cemetery]] because demons might be attracted to them sexually, and the [[shofar]] was sometimes blown at [[funeral]]s to ward off the evil spirits there (see Yalḳ., Ḥadash, l.c. 47).
  
The point of the exorcism is to heal the person being possessed and the spirit doing the possessing. This is a stark contrast to the Catholic exorcism that is intended to drive away the offending spirit or demon. Winkler said, "We don't drive anything out of anybody. What we want to do is to heal the soul that's possessing and heal the person. It's all about healing -- we do the ceremony on behalf of both people."
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The tradition of the [[Kabbalah]] tended to make evil spirits part of the cosmic pattern in which pure and impure powers fill the world and divide it between the [[Yahweh|Holy One]] and the serpent [[Samael]] (see Zohar, Bereshit, 47b, 53 et seq., 169b et seq., 174b). Many prayers for the warding off of demonic influences found a place in the Jewish [[liturgy]] and the [[Shulḥan 'Aruk]]. A special incantation is prescribed invoking the protection of guardian angels against the evil spirits haunting privies (see Ber. 60b; compare Ber. 62a and Oraḥ Ḥayyim, 13, 1). Prayers recited before retiring to bed were also intended to guard the sleeper against demons (Ber. 4a; Shebu. 15b). At the close of the [[Sabbath]], evil spirits were thought to swarm everywhere, poisoning the wells and doing harm in many ways (see Pesiḳ. R. xxiii.; Sheeltot, Bereshit; Tanya, xxi.; Ha-Manhig, Shabbat, 65; Solomon b. Adret, Responsa, 1119; Kol Bo, xli).
  
In some cases, a person may exhibit signs of dybbuk but the problem is purely psychological. Rabbi Winkler recounted a story from Jewish folklore that took place in the eighteenth century — around the time the first wind-up alarm clock was invented. A woman brought her daughter to her rabbi because she suspected a dybbuk. The rabbi diagnosed the young girl and didn't find any real signs of possession, so he sent her home with an alarm clock and told her to carry it throughout the day. The rabbi told the woman and her daughter that at 4:30 that afternoon, the dybbuk would leave the girl. At 4:30, the family believed the dybbuk was gone by the mere shock of hearing the bell go off at exactly 4:30.
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==Later Jewish tradition==
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{{readout||right|250px|Belief in dybbuks, [[soul]]s of the dead that attach themselves to living persons on earth, became widespread in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries}}
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While belief in evil spirits, possession, and [[exorcism]] goes back to ancient times, a widespread belief in dybbuks as such became evident especially in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The [[Kabbala|kabbalist]] [[Isaac Luria]] (1534–1572), popularized the use of incantations, both for mystical purposes and to ward off [[demon]]s ("Tiḳḳune Shabbat"). Luria's influential works emphasized the correlation between the physical and spiritual worlds and the cooperation of spiritual beings with humans on earth. He described this relationship as a method by which imperfect souls could transmigrate or cooperate with men on earth to attain spiritual perfection. Other kabbalistic writers developed the idea of the dybbuk attaching itself to the body of a human being on earth.
  
There is also a positive aspect to a dybbuk. Sometimes a spirit will come to a person in a time of need to help. Winkler said, "The second kind of possession is called 'sod ha'ibbur,' which is Hebrew for 'mystery impregnation.' This kind of possession is a good possession — it's a spirit guide. The spirit of someone who has struggled and overcome what you have struggled with and can't overcome will be lent to you from the spirit world to possess you, encourage you, and help you overcome what you have not been able to overcome and what it has been able to in its lifetime. Then when it's done and you've managed to achieve what you need to achieve in your life, it leaves you. Sometimes people reach high pinnacles of achievement and they fall into deep depression, and that's explained as the loss of that spirit. So there's a sense of loss, and it's misinterpreted as depression. If the person realizes that, they can be thankful that they had a spirit guide to help them, and they need to continue to lift up their own spirit."
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In [[kabbalah|kabbalistic texts]] and [[Judaism|Jewish]] [[folklore]], a dybbuk is believed to be the dislocated [[soul]] of a dead person returned from [[Gehenna]], the Hebrew term for the [[spiritual world]] below [[heaven]]. Occasionally, a soul that has not been able to fulfill its purpose on earth is given another opportunity to do so as a dybbuk. Such a spirit seeks out a living person in a similar situation to itself during its lifetime and attaches itself to that person. Thus, a dybbuk is the soul or spirit of a dead [[human being]] and so can be distinguished from a [[demon]], a spirit or supernatural being such as a malevolent fallen [[angel]].
  
Most belief systems have some notion of a spirit guide or guardian angel, and they also recognize a malevolent spiritual force that can influence us. The Jewish concept of dybbuk recognizes that our physical world and the spiritual world can intertwine for both positive and negative reasons. If those intersecting reasons are negative, Judaism has a healing process to mend the collision so both the possessor and the possessed can move on.
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Possession is not always a bad or unhealthy thing. While dybbuks are evil there is also beneficial possession known as ''sod ha'ibbur,'' Hebrew for "mysterious impregnation." A good ibbur acts as a kind of "spiritual guide" to help the person through his or her current trials and tribulations, while simultaneously accomplishing its own purpose and thus perfecting itself. This kind of spirit is thought to have struggled and gained victory over what the host himself has not yet been able to overcome. In this case the spirit is "lent" to the host from the spirit world as a guide or [[guardian angel]]. In such cases, the ibbur does not need to be exorcised, but leaves the host once its mission is accomplished. However, the loss of the ibbur can sometimes result in [[clinical depression]], as the host misses the energy and inspiration it formerly received.
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In the case of an evil dybbuk, however, the spirit peruses its own negative inclinations and may attempt to cause its host to make the same mistakes and sins it committed during its own lifetime. A dybbuk is thought to be drawn to a person who whose spirit and body are not fully connected to each other. Examples include severe depression, [[psychosis]], or the use of mind-altering drugs. The dybbuk is particularly attracted to a person who is struggling with the same challenges or feelings it did. Thus, a dybbuk who died alone and resentful might return to a person in a similar circumstance and make her life more miserable that ever. A dybbuk who was a heavy drinker during his lifetime might tempt his host to become habitually drunk. Dybbuks of a more neutral type might attach themselves in order to gain satisfaction for past injustices.
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 +
===Exorcising a dybbuk===
 +
In [[hasidism|Hasidic tradition]], a particularly powerful miracle-working [[rabbi]] known as a ''baʿal shem'' (master of the name) could expel even the most evil dybbuk through a rite of [[exorcism]]. However, exorcism of a dybbuk today normally normally involves nine Jews plus the rabbi. The ceremony is not normally one of overpowering the dybbuk, but of first shocking it, and then dialoging with it in an attempt to cause it to see that it needs to leave.
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The group surrounds the possessed victim and repeatedly recites the comforting, protective verses of [[Psalm]] 91. The rabbi proceeds to blow a [[shofar]] (ram's horn trumpet) in a specific pattern. This "shocks" both the possessed person and the dybbuk, causing a loosening between the two which enables each entity to be addressed separately. Once this is accomplished, the rabbi enters into a dialog with the dybbuk to discover its purpose. The group then proceeds to heal it through dialog and prayer, and this is also done for a person who is possessed. Sometimes the legitimate needs of the dybbuk must be satisfied before it agrees to leave.
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While many Jews today no longer accept the idea of dybbuks and their influence, in some communities, especially (but not only) among Hasidic Jews, ceremonies to liberate people from dybbuk possession are still performed.
 +
 
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==''The Dybbuk''==
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''The Dybbuk'' was a 1914 play by [[S. Ansky]], relating the story of a young bride possessed by a dybbuk on the eve of her wedding. It is considered a seminal work in the history of Jewish drama and played an important role in the development of [[Yiddish theatre]]. The play was based on years of research by S. Ansky, who traveled between Jewish [[shtetl]]s in [[Russia]] and the [[Ukraine]], documenting folk beliefs and stories of the [[hasidism|Hassidic Jews]]. [[Leonard Bernstein]] composed a [[ballet]] based on the play.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
+
*Chajes, Jeffrey Howard. ''Between Worlds: Dybbuks, Exorcists, and Early Modern Judaism''. Jewish culture and contexts. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003. ISBN 9780812237245
 +
*Neugroschel, Joachim (ed.). ''The Dybbuk and the Yiddish Imagination: A Haunted Reader''. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0815628729
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*Winkler, Gershon. ''Dybbuk''. New York, NY: Judaica Press, 1981. ISBN 9780910818384
  
==See also==
+
==External links==
*[[Jewish mythology]]
+
All links retrieved February 12, 2024.
*[[Kabbalah]]
 
*[[Ibbur]]
 
*[[Gilgul neshamot]]
 
*[[Qliphoth]]
 
*[[The Dybbuk]] (a play by [[S. Ansky]], and later adaptations):
 
**a 1937 film directed by Michał Waszyński
 
**[[Dybbuk (Bernstein)|Dybbuk]], a [[ballet]] by [[Leonard Bernstein]]
 
**[[A Dybbuk (Kushner)|A Dybbuk]], adaptation by [[Tony Kushner]]
 
*Song by [[Gackt|Gackt Camui]]
 
*[[Zuby Nehty|An all-female Czech rock group]]
 
  
==External links==
+
*[https://pantheon.org/articles/d/dybbuk.html Dybbuk] by Ilil Arbel, ''Encyclopedia Mythica''.
*[http://www.pantheon.org/articles/d/dybbuk.html Dybbuk by Ilil Arbel, Ph.D.]
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*[https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/dibbuk-dybbuk Dibbuk (Dybbuk)] ''Jewish Virtual Library''.
*[http://www.ghostvillage.com/legends/2003/legends32_11292003.shtml Dybbuk - Spiritual Possession and Jewish Folklore]
 
  
 
[[Category:religion]]
 
[[Category:religion]]
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[[Category:mythology]]
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[[Category:Judaism]]
 
{{Credit|210374888}}
 
{{Credit|210374888}}

Latest revision as of 17:25, 12 February 2024

Actress Hana Rovina portrays a possessed woman in The Dybbuk

In Kabbalah and European Jewish folklore, a dybbuk is a spirit of a dead person that attaches itself to a person on earth. The word "dybbuk" is derived from a Hebrew term meaning "attachment."

According to kabbalistic tradition, a soul that has not been able to fulfill its function in its lifetime is sometimes given another opportunity to do so in the form of a dybbuk. Dybbuks seek out people who face similar challenges or circumstances to themselves and attach themselves to their bodies. Dybbuks are said to have escaped from Gehenna, the Jewish purgatory, or even to have been turned away from Gehenna for transgressions too serious for the soul to be allowed entrance, such as suicide. A good spirit or ibbur may also possess a person for a while, but will leave of its own accord once it has accomplished a goal of mutual benefit with its host. An evil dybbuk, however, often leaves only after being satisfied or exorcised.

While Jewish tradition regarding good and evil spiritual influences on living humans dates back to ancient times, fascination with dybbuks became particularly widespread in Jewish culture of the sixteenth century and later. In 1914, Jewish playwright S. Ansky wrote a significant Yiddish play called The Dybbuk. The story relates the plight of a young bride possessed by a dybbuk on the eve of her wedding. Leonard Bernstein later composed a ballet based on Ansky's play. Although belief in dybbuks has diminished in recent times, in some Jewish communities their existence is considered a reality. Some rabbis still engage in exorcism rituals to help free people thought to be afflicted with a dybbuk.

Ancient background

Dybbuk, by Ephraim Moshe Lilien (1874–1925)

While stories of evil spirits and exorcism are relatively rare in the Old Testament, a famous instance of spirit possession is related in the story of King Saul, who was possessed by an "evil spirit form the Lord" after losing God's support as king. According to 1 Samuel 16:23 "Whenever the evil spirit from God came upon Saul, David would take his harp and play. Then relief would come to Saul; he would feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him." In the apocryphal Book of Tobit, a beautiful bride name Sarah is plagued by a demon who has killed all seven or her husbands on her wedding night. She is finally liberated after the angel Raphael instructs Tobit (Tobias) to marry Sarah and drive away the demon by burning a fish's liver and heart.

Exorcisms were also done at Qumran by the Essene branch of Judaism. Jesus of Nazareth was a powerful Jewish healer and exorcist, as evil spirits were believed to be the source of much illness. Jewish sources report exorcisms being done in the first century C.E. by administering drugs with poisonous root extracts or by offering sacrifices (Josephus, "B. J." vii. 6, § 3; Sanh. 65b).

Talmudic and kabbalistic tradition

While not denying the influence of spirits, Pharisaism insisted that the observance of the Law was the best defense against demons (Ber. 5a; Num. 48b). In addition, the tefillin were regarded by some Jews as amulets of protection (Targ. Cant. viii. 3; Gen. R. xxxv.; Men. 33b). Protection against evil spirits was also provided by the posting of a mezuzah at the door of one's home and the reading of certain prayers such as the Shema.

A Talmudic injunction affirms the presence of both good an evil spirits in human affairs: "The wicked are accompanied by the angels of Satan; the righteous by the angels of God" (Tosef., Shab. xvii. 2-3; compare Book of Jubilees, x. 6). "Every observance of the Law is a protection" (Soṭah 21a), and those bent upon doing some sacred work need fear no evil powers (Pes. 8b). A priest's blessing also is a protection against malign influences (Num. R. xi).

The reality of demons was never questioned by the Talmudists and most other rabbinic commentators. Jewish law accepted them as a fact (see Shulchan Aruch, Oraḥ Ḥayyim, 4, 2 et seq). Nor did most of the medieval Jewish thinkers question their reality. Only the philosophers Maimonides and Ibn Ezra denied their existence.

As early as geonic times (sixth through eleventh centuries C.E.) a special incantatory formula was recited before drinking from the cup of the Sabbath wine against "the demon Puta, the prince of forgetfulness." It commanded "by the power of the holy names of the angels Arimaz, Arimas, Ansisel, and Petahel, he may be cast upon the high mountains Alburz" ("Seder Rab Amram," i. 31). Many rites and prayer formulas were introduced to avert the malign influence of evil spirits, and special formulas for the dying were prescribed in the Kabbalah by which all the demons that may have been created or attracted by the impure thoughts and actions of the dying person, brought under control. Amuleta, incantations, prayers, and other formulas became widespread. Women were sometimes banned from going to a cemetery because demons might be attracted to them sexually, and the shofar was sometimes blown at funerals to ward off the evil spirits there (see Yalḳ., Ḥadash, l.c. 47).

The tradition of the Kabbalah tended to make evil spirits part of the cosmic pattern in which pure and impure powers fill the world and divide it between the Holy One and the serpent Samael (see Zohar, Bereshit, 47b, 53 et seq., 169b et seq., 174b). Many prayers for the warding off of demonic influences found a place in the Jewish liturgy and the Shulḥan 'Aruk. A special incantation is prescribed invoking the protection of guardian angels against the evil spirits haunting privies (see Ber. 60b; compare Ber. 62a and Oraḥ Ḥayyim, 13, 1). Prayers recited before retiring to bed were also intended to guard the sleeper against demons (Ber. 4a; Shebu. 15b). At the close of the Sabbath, evil spirits were thought to swarm everywhere, poisoning the wells and doing harm in many ways (see Pesiḳ. R. xxiii.; Sheeltot, Bereshit; Tanya, xxi.; Ha-Manhig, Shabbat, 65; Solomon b. Adret, Responsa, 1119; Kol Bo, xli).

Later Jewish tradition

Did you know?
Belief in dybbuks, souls of the dead that attach themselves to living persons on earth, became widespread in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries

While belief in evil spirits, possession, and exorcism goes back to ancient times, a widespread belief in dybbuks as such became evident especially in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The kabbalist Isaac Luria (1534–1572), popularized the use of incantations, both for mystical purposes and to ward off demons ("Tiḳḳune Shabbat"). Luria's influential works emphasized the correlation between the physical and spiritual worlds and the cooperation of spiritual beings with humans on earth. He described this relationship as a method by which imperfect souls could transmigrate or cooperate with men on earth to attain spiritual perfection. Other kabbalistic writers developed the idea of the dybbuk attaching itself to the body of a human being on earth.

In kabbalistic texts and Jewish folklore, a dybbuk is believed to be the dislocated soul of a dead person returned from Gehenna, the Hebrew term for the spiritual world below heaven. Occasionally, a soul that has not been able to fulfill its purpose on earth is given another opportunity to do so as a dybbuk. Such a spirit seeks out a living person in a similar situation to itself during its lifetime and attaches itself to that person. Thus, a dybbuk is the soul or spirit of a dead human being and so can be distinguished from a demon, a spirit or supernatural being such as a malevolent fallen angel.

Possession is not always a bad or unhealthy thing. While dybbuks are evil there is also beneficial possession known as sod ha'ibbur, Hebrew for "mysterious impregnation." A good ibbur acts as a kind of "spiritual guide" to help the person through his or her current trials and tribulations, while simultaneously accomplishing its own purpose and thus perfecting itself. This kind of spirit is thought to have struggled and gained victory over what the host himself has not yet been able to overcome. In this case the spirit is "lent" to the host from the spirit world as a guide or guardian angel. In such cases, the ibbur does not need to be exorcised, but leaves the host once its mission is accomplished. However, the loss of the ibbur can sometimes result in clinical depression, as the host misses the energy and inspiration it formerly received.

In the case of an evil dybbuk, however, the spirit peruses its own negative inclinations and may attempt to cause its host to make the same mistakes and sins it committed during its own lifetime. A dybbuk is thought to be drawn to a person who whose spirit and body are not fully connected to each other. Examples include severe depression, psychosis, or the use of mind-altering drugs. The dybbuk is particularly attracted to a person who is struggling with the same challenges or feelings it did. Thus, a dybbuk who died alone and resentful might return to a person in a similar circumstance and make her life more miserable that ever. A dybbuk who was a heavy drinker during his lifetime might tempt his host to become habitually drunk. Dybbuks of a more neutral type might attach themselves in order to gain satisfaction for past injustices.

Exorcising a dybbuk

In Hasidic tradition, a particularly powerful miracle-working rabbi known as a baʿal shem (master of the name) could expel even the most evil dybbuk through a rite of exorcism. However, exorcism of a dybbuk today normally normally involves nine Jews plus the rabbi. The ceremony is not normally one of overpowering the dybbuk, but of first shocking it, and then dialoging with it in an attempt to cause it to see that it needs to leave.

The group surrounds the possessed victim and repeatedly recites the comforting, protective verses of Psalm 91. The rabbi proceeds to blow a shofar (ram's horn trumpet) in a specific pattern. This "shocks" both the possessed person and the dybbuk, causing a loosening between the two which enables each entity to be addressed separately. Once this is accomplished, the rabbi enters into a dialog with the dybbuk to discover its purpose. The group then proceeds to heal it through dialog and prayer, and this is also done for a person who is possessed. Sometimes the legitimate needs of the dybbuk must be satisfied before it agrees to leave.

While many Jews today no longer accept the idea of dybbuks and their influence, in some communities, especially (but not only) among Hasidic Jews, ceremonies to liberate people from dybbuk possession are still performed.

The Dybbuk

The Dybbuk was a 1914 play by S. Ansky, relating the story of a young bride possessed by a dybbuk on the eve of her wedding. It is considered a seminal work in the history of Jewish drama and played an important role in the development of Yiddish theatre. The play was based on years of research by S. Ansky, who traveled between Jewish shtetls in Russia and the Ukraine, documenting folk beliefs and stories of the Hassidic Jews. Leonard Bernstein composed a ballet based on the play.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Chajes, Jeffrey Howard. Between Worlds: Dybbuks, Exorcists, and Early Modern Judaism. Jewish culture and contexts. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003. ISBN 9780812237245
  • Neugroschel, Joachim (ed.). The Dybbuk and the Yiddish Imagination: A Haunted Reader. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0815628729
  • Winkler, Gershon. Dybbuk. New York, NY: Judaica Press, 1981. ISBN 9780910818384

External links

All links retrieved February 12, 2024.

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