Difference between revisions of "Gershom Ben Judah" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Gershom ben Judah''', (c. [[960]] -[[1040]]?) was a French rabbi, best known as '''Rabbeinu Gershom''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''רבנו גרשום''', "Our teacher Gershom"), who was the founder of [[talmud]]ic studies in France and Germany.  
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{{Judaism}}
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'''Gershom ben Judah''', (c. 960 -1040?) was a French [[rabbi]], best known as '''Rabbeinu Gershom''' ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]: '''רבנו גרשום''', "Our teacher Gershom"), who was the founder of [[Talmud]]ic studies in [[France]] and [[Germany]]. He is also known by the title ''Me'Or Hagolah'' ("The Light of [[Jewish diaspora|the exile]]").  
  
and also commonly known to scholars of [[Judaism]] by the title ''Rabbeinu Gershom Me'Or Hagolah'' ("Our teacher Gershom the light of [[Jewish diaspora|the exile]]"), was a famous [[Talmud]]ist and [[Halakha|Halakhist]].  
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Born in [[Metz]], [[France]], Gershom's teacher was the French rabbi [[Yehudah ben Meir]] Hakohen, also known as Sir Leofitin. His early life is surrounded with legends of his supposed adventures in the East, which are of dubious historicity. Gershom established a [[yeshiva]] in [[Mainz]], [[Germany]], which soon became the leading Talmudic academy of [[Europe]], rivaling the great schools of the Jewish community of [[Babylon]]ia. Among his many disciples were the principal teachers of the great sage [[Rashi]], especially Rabbi [[Jacob ben Yakar]].
  
[[Rashi]] of [[Troyes]] (d. 1105) said less than a century after Gershom's death, "all members of the [[Ashkenazi]] diaspora are students of his."  As early as the [[14th century]] [[Asher ben Jehiel]] wrote that Rabbeinu Gershom's writings were "such permanent fixtures that they may well have been handed down on [[Mount Sinai]]."
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Around 1000 C.E. Gershom called a [[synod]] that determined several major points of [[Rabbinic Judaism]], including the prohibition of [[polygamy]], the necessity of the wife consenting to [[divorce]], the compassionate treatment of Jews who became [[apostate]]s under compulsion, and the prohibition of opening correspondence addressed to another. The rule against polygamy was revolutionary, in that most Jews of the time lived in [[Islam]]ic countries such as Babylonia and [[Spain]], and still held polygamy to be acceptable.
  
About 1000 C.E. Gershom called a [[synod]] that decided the following particulars, altering the practice of [[Rabbinic Judaism]]: (1) prohibition of [[polygamy#Judaism|polygamy]]; (2) necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a [[divorce]]; (3) modification of the rules concerning those who became [[apostate]]s under compulsion; (4) prohibition against opening correspondence addressed to another.
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[[Rashi]] (d. 1105) declared that all of the great rabbis of his own era were "students of his (Gershom's) students." In the fourteenth century, Rabbi [[Asher ben Jehiel]] wrote that Rabbeinu Gershom's writings were "such permanent fixtures that they may well have been handed down on [[Mount Sinai]]."
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Rabbeinu Gershom studied under [[Judah ben Meïr ha-Kohen]], who was one of the greatest authorities of his time. Having lost his first wife, Gershom married a widow named Bonna and settled at Mayence, where he devoted himself to teaching the [[Talmud]]. He had many pupils from different countries, among whom should be mentioned Eleazar ben Isaac ha-Gadol ("the Great"), nephew of Simeon ha-Gadol; and Jacob ben Yaḳar, the teacher of the great rabbinical sage [[Rashi]]. The fame of Gershom's learning eclipsed even that of the heads of the Babylonian academies of the Sura and Pumbedita, which until them had been preeminent.
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Rabbeinu Gershom studied under [[Judah ben Meir ha-Kohen]], who was one of the greatest authorities of his time. Having lost his first wife, traditionally known as Judah's daughter Deborah, Gershom married a widow named Bonna and settled at Mainz, where he devoted himself to teaching the [[Talmud]]. He had many pupils from different countries, among whom were [[Eleazar ben Isaac]] and [[Jacob ben Yakar]], the teacher of the great rabbinical sage [[Rashi]]. The fame of Gershom's learning eclipsed even that of the heads of the Babylonian academies of the [[Sura]] and [[Pumbedita]], which until them had been preeminent.
  
During Gershom's lifetime [[Mainz]] became a center of [[Torah]] and [[Jew]]ish scholarship for many Jewish communities in [[Europe]] that had formerly been connected with the [[Babylonian]] ''[[yeshiva]]s.''  He was the spiritual guide of the fledgling [[Ashkenazi]]c Jewish communities and was very influential in molding them at a time when their population was dwindling.  
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During Gershom's lifetime [[Mainz]] became a center of [[Torah]] and [[Jew]]ish scholarship for many Jewish communities in [[Europe]] that had formerly been connected with the [[Babylonian]] [[yeshiva]]s. He became the spiritual leader of the fledgling [[Ashkenazi]]c Jewish communities and was very influential in molding them at a time when their already small population was dwindling.  
  
The most difficult questions were addressed to him by Jews from all quarters, and measures which he authorized had legal force among virtually all the Jews of Europe. In about the year 1000 he called a [[synod]] which decided the following particulars:
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The most difficult [[halakha|halakhic]] questions were addressed to him by Jews from all quarters, and measures which he authorized had legal force among virtually all the Jews of Europe. In about the year 1000 he called a [[synod]] which decided the following particulars:
  
* prohibition of polygamy
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*prohibition of [[polygamy]]
*necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a divorce
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*necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a [[divorce]]
*liberalization of the rules concerning those who became apostates under compulsion
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*showing compassion to those who became [[apostate]]s under compulsion
 
*prohibition of opening correspondence addressed to another
 
*prohibition of opening correspondence addressed to another
  
Gershom's was also an active writer. He is celebrated for his works in the field of Biblical exegesis, the ''[[Masorah]]'' (textual criticism), and lexicography. He revised the text of both the [[Mishnah]] and [[Talmud]], the fundamental texts of rabbinical Judaism. He also wrote commentaries on several treatises of the Talmud which were very popular and gave an impulse to the production of many other works of the kind.
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The first two of these are recognized as milestones of women's rights in Jewish tradition.
  
He also composed poetic penitential prayers warning the people against sin, which were inspired by the bloody persecutions of his time. He is the author of [[Selichot|Seliha]] 42—''Zechor Berit Avraham'' ("Remember the Covenant of Abraham")—a liturgical poem recited by Ashkenazic Jews during the [[High Holidays|season of Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur]]:
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Gershom was also an active writer. He is celebrated for his works in the field of biblical [[exegesis]], the ''[[Masorah]]'' ([[textual criticism]]), and [[lexicography]]. He revised and clarified the text of both the [[Mishnah]] and [[Talmud]], the fundamental texts of rabbinical Judaism. He also wrote commentaries on several treatises of the Talmud which were very popular and provided the impulse for the production of many other works of the kind.
  
"The [[Jerusalem|Holy City]] and its regions<br>
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[[Image:Tombleson Mainz Cathedral.jpg|thumb|250px|Mainz Cathedral was consecrated in Rabbeinu Gershom's day, presenting a glorious contrast to the devastation of the [[Temple of Jerusalem]] commemorated in Gershom's poem ''Zechor Berit Avraham''.]]
are turned to shame and to spoils<br>
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and all its desirable things are buried and hidden<br>
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Gershom also composed poetic penitential [[prayer]]s, which were inspired by the bloody persecutions of his time, warning the people against [[sin]]. He is the author of [[Selichot|Seliha]] 42—''Zechor Berit Avraham'' ("Remember the Covenant of Abraham")—a liturgical poem recited by Ashkenazic Jews during the season of [[Rosh HaShana]] and [[Yom Kippur]]:
and nothing is left except this [[Torah]]."
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:"The [[Jerusalem|Holy City]] and its regions<br/>
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:are turned to shame and to spoils<br/>
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:and all its desirable things are buried and hidden<br/>
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:and nothing is left except this [[Torah]]."
  
 
Gershom also left a large number of rabbinical ''[[responsa]]'', which are scattered throughout various collections. His life reportedly conformed to his teachings.
 
Gershom also left a large number of rabbinical ''[[responsa]]'', which are scattered throughout various collections. His life reportedly conformed to his teachings.
  
 
===Man of tolerance===
 
===Man of tolerance===
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Rabbeinu Gershom reportedly had a son who forsook the Jewish religion and became a Christian at the time of the expulsion of the Jews from Mainz in 1012. The young man later died before his father, without having returned to [[Judaism]]. Refusing to disown him spiritually, as many others would have done, Gershom grieved for his son, observing all the forms of Jewish mourning. His example in this regard became a rule for others in similar cases.
  
Rabbeinu Gershom had a son who forsook the Jewish religion and became a Christian at the time of the expulsion of the Jews from Mayence in 1012. The young many later died before his father, sill a Christian. Refusing to disown him spiritually, Gershom grieved for his son, observing all the forms of Jewish mourning. His example in this regard became a rule for others in similar cases.
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His tolerance also extended to those who had submitted to [[baptism]] to escape persecution and who afterward returned to the Jewish fold. He strictly prohibited reproaching them for their [[apostasy]], and even gave those among them who had been slandered an opportunity to pray publicly in the [[synagogue]]s.
 
 
His tolerance also extended to who had submitted to [[baptism]] to escape persecution and who afterward returned to the Jewish fold. He strictly prohibited reproaching them for their [[apostasy]], and even gave those among them who had been slandered an opportunity to publicly pray publicly in the [[synagogue]]s.
 
  
 
==Legends==
 
==Legends==
As with many of the great rabbis of this and other periods, the life of Rabbeinu Gershom is surrounded with legends. As a young man, he had already won great renown as a scholar and example of righteousness. His teacher esteemed him so highly that he gave Gershom the hand of his daughter Devorah in marriage.
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As with many of the great [[rabbi]]s of this and other periods, the life of Rabbeinu Gershom is surrounded with wonderful [[legend]]s.
  
Soon after this Gershom and Devorah traveled to the Babylonian city of [[Pompadissa]], where the renowned [[Shrira Gaon]] headed perhaps the greatest [[Talumd]]ic academy in the world. The journey there was full of hardship and adventures.
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The story goes that as a young man, he had already won great renown as a scholar and example of righteousness. His teacher, Judah ben Meïr ha-Kohen, esteemed him so highly that he gave Gershom the hand of his daughter Deborah in marriage.
  
In Pompadissa Gershom spent several happy years devoting himself to the study of the Torah and Talmud. When he reached the point of becoming a teacher himself, he did not want to profit from his knowledge, but labored as goldsmith, developing great skill in this trade and settling in the great city of [[Constantinople]], the most important trading center of the East.
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Soon after this Gershom and Deborah traveled to the [[Babylonia]]n city of [[Pumbedita]], where the renowned [[Sherira Gaon]] headed perhaps the greatest [[Talumd]]ic academy in the world. The journey there was full of hardship and adventures.
  
While there, a tremendous fire swept through the city, leaving it in ruin. This was followed almost immediately by a horrible plague. So terrible was the situation that victims lay dying everywhere in the city's streets.
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In Pumbedita, Gershom spent several happy years devoting himself to the study of the [[Torah]] and [[Talmud]]. When he reached the point of becoming a teacher himself, he did not want to profit from his knowledge, but labored as a [[goldsmith]], developing marvelous skill in this trade and settling in the great city of [[Constantinople]], the most important trading center of the East.
  
Rabbeinu Gershom escaped both the fire and the plague, but he refused to sit passively and witness the suffering of his fellow men, even though they were not Jews. He had some knowledge of medicine as a result of his studies, and he thus took up this profession. With utter selflessness and lack of concern for his own safety, he ministered to the sick.
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While there, a tremendous fire swept through the city, leaving it in ruin, followed almost immediately by a horrible plague. Victims lay dying everywhere in the city's streets. Rabbeinu Gershom refused to sit passively and witness the suffering of his fellow men, even though they were not Jews. He had some knowledge of medicine as a result of his studies, and with utter selflessness he ministered to the sick.
  
During that period, there ruled over that land a king named Basil. Basil was a just man, but he was weak-willed and often misled by his advisors and ministers. Among them, was a very sly and wicked fellow named John. John, who without just cause hated the Jews bitterly, was constantly seeking an opportunity to transform this hate into actual deeds.
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[[Image:Basilios II.jpg|thumb|[[Basil II]] of [[Constantinople]]]]
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The Byzantine emperor [[Basil II]] ruled at Constantinople during this time. Although he personally was a good man, he was easily misled by his advisers, especially a certain John, and unrelenting Jew-hater. When the emperor consulted his advisers concerning the fire an plague, John blamed the [[Jews]], ultimately persuading Basil to issue a decree expelling the Jews and confiscating their property.
  
The king had called a conference of all his ministers to decide how to cope with the present emergency. John could not resist this opportunity to malign the Jews. "Your Majesty, the Jews are to blame for the fire. Let us rid the country of them!" On and on the cruel John spoke, until he finally persuaded the king to issue a decree which would confiscate all Jewish property, and exile the Jews.
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Soon after this, however, Basil's daughter fell desperately ill. The greatest physicians of the empire were summoned to the palace to heal her, but none of them could effect a cure. When the news of the sick princess reached Rabbeinu Gershom, he immediately set out for the palace, despite the risk. According to the legend, Basil told him: "If you succeed in curing the princess I will reward you generously, but if you fail, you will lose your head!"
  
The Cure
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Gershom examined the princess, but he quickly realized that he was beyond human help. Only a miracle could save her. Gershom prayed to God with all his heart. "O [[names of God in Judaism|G-d]]," he implored, "save this girl, for the sake of your people."
  
Soon afterwards, the king's daughter fell ill. From near and far, the greatest physicians of the realm flocked to the palace to try to cure the king's daughter, future heiress to the throne. But it was of no avail. None of them could cure her. There the child lay, on her little bed, growing paler and weaker each day and no one could help her.
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The color immediately came back to her, and with each day she grew stronger. The overjoyed emperor and empress were filled with gratitude to Gershom, and Basil offered him a rich reward of luxurious wealth. Gershom replied that the greatest reward he could receive would be the withdrawal of the decree against the Jews. Basil agreed, and soon the decree was annulled.
  
Rabbi Gershom heard of the sick princess, and set out for the palace. When he told the guards of his intention to cure the king's daughter, he was ushered into the king's presence. "If you succeed to cure the princess I will reward you generously, but if you fail, then you will forfeit your head!"
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===The Silver Throne===
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[[Image:Soloon's throne.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Scale model of Solomon's throne]]
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Gershom now became Basil II's friend and close confident. One day, Gershom happened to tell the emperor the story of [[Solomon]]'s wonderful golden throne. Knowing Gershom to be a goldsmith, Basil asked him to create such a throne for him. However, it turned our that there was not enough [[gold]] in the king's treasury for the task, so the throne was thus fashioned out of [[silver]]. So complicated was the task that it took several years to complete. When it was finished, a great festival was planned to celebrate its unveiling.
  
They quietly filed into the room of the little princess. After Rabbi Gershom had examined the princess, he realized how hopelessly ill she really was. Nothing could save her now save a miracle of G-d. Rabbi Gershom began to pray to G-d with all his heart. "Show me the way, dear G-d, to help this sick girl. Grant me wisdom, O G-d, for the sake of Your people."
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However, as Basil ascended the magnificent throne, he became confused about the operation of its marvelous hidden mechanisms. He thus asked Rabbeinu Gershom to ascend the throne before him and show him how it worked. Six silver steps led up the throne, each one flanked by two different animals, all cast of silver. As Gershom ascended, the animals marvelously extended their feet to support him. When he had reached the last step and took his seat, a huge silver [[eagle]] held the royal crown over Gershom's head. The courtiers broke out into enthusiastic cheers and applause. Gershom then descended and received the emperor's thanks, Basil proceeded to mount the throne and take his proper place.
  
(2)
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The evil minister John, however, so jealous of Gershom's success that he determined to find a way to do away with him. John knew that some of the workmen had stolen silver during the throne's construction and conceived a plan to lay the blame on Gershom. "Let us weigh the throne and ascertain the truth," he told the king. Basil agreed, but there was no scale large enough to weigh the throne. The empire's greatest engineers all attempted to create a way to weigh the throne, but they all failed.
  
Rabbenu Gershom proceeded to cure the little girl. Soon, the color came back to her cheeks, her eyes began to show some life in them, and each day she gained new strength.
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The one thing that brought sadness to Rabbeinu Gershom's heart was the fact that he had no children. His wife, like the matriarchs of the [[Bible]], was barren, thus she encouraged him to take a second wife by whom he could perpetuate his lineage. This woman had many acquaintances in the royal household. Like [[Delilah]] before her, she used every possible womanly wile and finally succeeded in coaxing from him the secret of how to weigh the throne—by placing the throne in a boat and measuring the displacement of water which this created.
  
When the little princess finally stepped out on the terrace for the first time after her long illness, the king and queen were overjoyed. They could scarcely believe their eyes. Full of gratitude to Rabbenu Gershom for all that he had done, the king said: "I will give you an immense fortune. You will be so rich that you will never have to work for your living, and you will be able to spend all the days of your life, in ease and luxury."
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The woman, of course, immediately divulged the secret. When the throne was weighed, John's accusation seemed proven to be true, for the throne weighed substantially less than it should have. Basil summoned Gershom and informed him of the charges against him. Gershom explained that it must have been the workmen who stole the silver, but the emperor was now completely taken in by the evil John. He condemned Gershom to die unless agreed to be baptized as a Christian. Gershom refused to apostatize, and prepared to die. His one "consolation" was that, because he had saved the king's daughter, he would not be hanged, but would be imprisoned in a tower in an isolated desert. There, without any food or drink, he would starve to death.
  
But Rabbenu Gershom humbly replied, "O king, I have no desire for riches. For me the greatest reward would be the withdrawal of the decree against the Jews."
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Imprisoned in the tower, Gershom heard the sound of a woman crying. He looked out and saw his true wife, Deborah. "I have come to die with you," she said in tears. "I am glad you have come," Gershom replied, "but not to die with me. Find a woodworm and a beetle. Then get some silk thread, cord, and rope. Tie the silk thread about the beetle. Then tie the cord to the silk thread, and tie the rope to the cord. Let the worm crawl up the side of the tower and the beetle will pursue it, bringing the rope up to me."
  
The king was greatly impressed by Rabbenu Gershom's selflessness, and promised to fulfill his request. A few days later the decree was annulled. Rabbenu Gershom became even more beloved by his people than ever before.
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About a week later, the wicked John awoke from his sleep and determined to go to the desert and satisfy himself that the Gershom had died. Taking the keys to the tower with him, John climbed up and opened the Gershom's cell, only to find it empty. In his shock, he allowed the door to close, and the key was still in the lock outside! He used all of his strength, but was unable to force it open. There, he himself began to suffer the fate originally intended for Gershom.
  
The Silver Throne
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Rabbenu Gershom, meanwhile, stood with Deborah on the deck of a ship nearing the shores of his native land in France. Thus ends the legend. The rest, so they say, is history.
  
Since Rabbenu Gershom cured the princess, he and the king became good friends. The two spent many hours together in pleasant conversation. One day, Rabbenu Gershom happened to tell King Basil of Solomon's wonderful throne of gold. Basil, knowing Rabbenu Gershom to be also a goldsmith of note, asked him to fashion such a throne for him.
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==Legacy==
 
 
Rabbenu Gershom was reluctant to take the responsibility for the construction of the throne. "I cannot vouch for the honesty of the workmen, my king!" he said.
 
 
 
Bur the king waived all his protests aside. "I trust you implicitly and I have no doubt of your ability.
 
 
 
And so, Rabbenu Gershom undertook the construction of the throne. There being not enough gold in the king's treasury the chair was to be fashioned of silver.
 
 
 
You can imagine how involved, and intricate this throne was - for it took as skilled an artisan as Rabbenu Gershom several years to construct it. And when it was finally completed, what a great ado there was! The state-room was rebuilt to house the huge throne; a great festival was arranged to celebrate the presentation of the throne to the king. From near and far, people came to the palace to see the wonderful throne with their own eyes. Exclamations of wonder and admiration could be heard everywhere.
 
 
 
Suddenly the royal trumpets began to blow, heralding the approach of the king. The crowd parted to make way for him. As King Basil began to ascend the throne, he became confused by the movement of the hidden mechanism, and asked Rabbenu Gershom to ascend before him, so that he might see it in motion. Rabbenu Gershom willingly obliged.
 
 
 
An awed silence fell over the assembly. Never before had they seen such a magnificent, and almost incredible spectacle. There were six silver steps that led to the throne. On each step were two different animals cast of siIver. As Rabbenu Gershom ascended each step, the animals would extend a foot to support him. And when he had reached the last step, a huge eagle of silver brought the crown, and held it over his head. When Rabbenu Gershom was thus seated with the crown over his head, courtiers and guests, who, until then had been too overcome with surprise to utter a single syllable, broke out into wild cheers and applause. Everybody praised Rabbenu Gershom's ingenuity and skill.
 
 
 
When Rabbenu Gershom descended, the king thanked him, and proceeded to mount the throne.
 
 
 
John, the king's sly minister was green with envy at Rabbenu Gershom's huge success and growing popularity. Day and night, he pondered a way to defame and ruin the blameless Rabbi. And one day, he finally succeeded in devising a scheme.
 
 
 
Coming before the king he asked, "My king, how do you know that Rabbenu Gershom has not stolen any silver from the state treasury? How can you be certain that all the silver he has taken has gone into the construction of the throne? Let us weigh the throne and ascertain the truth."
 
 
 
John was almost sure that the workmen had stolen silver. But, he would blame Gershom, and have his revenge.
 
 
 
Basil agreed to John's plan. But there was one great obstacle. There was no scale that could weigh the throne. From far and near, the greatest engineers came to weigh the throne, but none of them succeeded. The only way to weigh it, they said was to take it apart, but they would not be responsible for its mechanism.
 
 
 
The Secret Divulged
 
 
 
Although Rabbenu Gershom was a very happy man, his heart was filled with sorrow because he had no children. His wife, Deborah, told him to take a second wife so that he might one day have a child.
 
 
 
This other woman had many close acquaintances in the royal household. She knew, too, that Rabbenu Gershom was the only person in the entire kingdom who knew how to weigh the throne that he himself had built. Using every persuasion and wile, she finally succeeded in coaxing the truth from her husband.
 
 
 
"It is really very simple," said Rabbenu Gershom. "All one has to do is to take a boat, and mark the water-line on the hull. After placing the throne in the boat, you mark the new water-line. When the throne is removed, one has to fill the boat with as many stones as are required to reach the second water-line. All you have to do then is to weigh the stones and you will know how much the throne weighs."
 
 
 
No sooner had she obtained this information, than she hastened to divulge it to one of her acquaintances at the palace.
 
 
 
When the throne was weighed in this fashion, John's accusation proved to be true. The king sent for Rabbenu Gershom, and informed him of the charge against him. "But," Rabbenu Gershom answered, "did I not tell the king that I would not vouch for my workmens' honesty? Surely I am not to blame, if they had stolen some silver." But it was of no avail. The king was completely dominated by John, and condemned Rabbenu Gershom to die, unless he chose to accept Christianity. Naturally, Rabbenu Gershom would not hear of this, and preferred to die. But, because he had once saved the king's daughter, he was given the privilege of being treated as a political prisoner, rather than as a common thief. Instead of being hanged, he would be conveyed to an isolated tower in the desert. There, without any food or drink, he would starve to death.
 
 
 
Escape
 
 
 
The next morning, high in his tower, Rabbenu Gershom heard the sound of a woman's cry. Leaning out through the window he saw his faithful wife, Deborah. In a tearful voice, she said, "I have come to die with you."
 
 
 
"I am glad you have come," Rabbenu Gershom replied, "but not to die with me. We will yet live happily, for you will help me escape! Listen carefully. Find a woodworm, and a beetle. Then get some silk thread, cord, and rope. Tie the silk thread about the beetle. Then tie the cord to the silk thread, and tie the rope to the cord. Let the worm crawl up the side of the tower and the beetle will pursue it, bringing the rope up to me."
 
 
 
About a week later, John awoke from a restless sleep one night, thinking of Rabbenu Gershom. "I will steal out into the desert, and since he is surely dead, I will have the great satisfaction of gloating over my enemy's remains," thought John to himself.
 
 
 
Armed with the keys to the tower John climbed up the stairs of the tower and opened the cell. Imagine how astonished he was to find the cell empty, with no sign of Rabbenu Gershom! But in his excitement, John made one great blunder. He closed the door, forgetting he had left the key outside. And when he finally recovered from his shock and disappointment and turned to go, the door was firmly bolted, and no amount of heaving and pushing could force it open. There, in the same prison he had prepared for Rabbenu Gershom, John knew he was held captive, until he would perish of starvation.
 
 
 
While, unbeknown to all, John lay rotting in the tower, Rabbenu Gershom, standing on the deck of a sailing boat, saw the welcome shores of his native land draw nearer and nearer.
 
 
 
He went to Maintz, where he was welcomed with the greatest respect and honor. There he established and directed the first Yeshivah ever to be founded on the Rhine.
 
  
"Meor Hagolah" (Light of the Exile) is a truly fitting title for this great man. Rabbenu Gershom, with his wisdom and love of Torah, G-d and man, was a beacon of light in those dark years of the diaspora, and for all generations thereafter.
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''Meor Hagolah'' (The Light of the Exile) is a fitting title for Rabbenu Gershom. He became a beacon of light for the [[Jews]] of the European [[diaspora]]. His [[yeshiva]] became the leading center of Jewish learning for the fledging Jewish community of France and Germany. Soon, through the work of such a gigantic figure as [[Rashi]], his tradition would be enshrined for generations.
  
==Legacy==
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The [[halakha|halakhic]] rulings of Gershom Ben Judah are considered binding on all of [[Ashkenazi]]c Jewry until the present day, although the basis for this is somewhat controversial. Some hold that his bans are still binding and others consider them to have technically expired but believe they nonetheless remain obligatory as universally accepted customs.
  
The halakhic rulings of Judah Ben Gershom are considered binding on all of Ashkenazic Jewry until the present day, although the basis for this is somewhat controversial. Some hold that the bans are still binding and others consider them to have techically expired but that they nonetheless remain obligatory as universally accepted customs.
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Some have speculated that if Rabbeinu Gershom had never lived, there may never have ever been what is today known as "[[Ashkenazi]]c Judaism." In the words of the renowned Rashi (1040–1105), all of the great European rabbis of the coming generation were “students of his students.
  
Some have speculated that if Rabbeinu Gershom had never lived then there may not have been something known as "Ashkenazic Judaism" as it is known today. In the words of the renowned talmudic commentator and rabbinical sage Rashi (1040–1105), all of the great European rabbis of the day were “students of his students.”
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==See also==
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*[[Rabbi]]
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*[[Rashi]]
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*[[Talmud]]
  
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
==External links==
 
*[[Solomon Schechter|Schechter, Solomon]] and [[Isaac Bloch|Bloch, Isaac]] [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=172&letter=G&search=Gershom%20ben%20Judah Gershom ben Judah] at the 1906 [[Jewish Encyclopedia]] site.
 
*[http://home.aol.com/lazera/rgershom.html Biographical page]
 
 
 
 
{{Jewish Encyclopedia}}
 
{{Jewish Encyclopedia}}
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* Biale, David. ''Cultures of the Jews: A New History.'' Schoken Books, 2002. ISBN 0805241310
 +
*Lehmann, Marcus. ''Rabbenu Gershom; Meor Hagolah, Light of the Exile''. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Merkos L'inyonei Chinuch, 1968. OCLC 19565653
 +
*Petuchowski, Aaron M. ''Inconsistency for Good Reason: The Responsa of Rabbenu Gershom''. New York: Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, 1983. OCLC 84994988
 +
* Shereshevsky, Esra. ''Rashi, the Man and His World''. New York: Sepher-Hermon Press, 1982. ISBN 9780872031012
 +
* Vital, David. ''A People Apart: A History of the Jews in Europe.'' Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 0198219806
  
 
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Gershom ben Judah, (c. 960 -1040?) was a French rabbi, best known as Rabbeinu Gershom (Hebrew: רבנו גרשום, "Our teacher Gershom"), who was the founder of Talmudic studies in France and Germany. He is also known by the title Me'Or Hagolah ("The Light of the exile").

Born in Metz, France, Gershom's teacher was the French rabbi Yehudah ben Meir Hakohen, also known as Sir Leofitin. His early life is surrounded with legends of his supposed adventures in the East, which are of dubious historicity. Gershom established a yeshiva in Mainz, Germany, which soon became the leading Talmudic academy of Europe, rivaling the great schools of the Jewish community of Babylonia. Among his many disciples were the principal teachers of the great sage Rashi, especially Rabbi Jacob ben Yakar.

Around 1000 C.E. Gershom called a synod that determined several major points of Rabbinic Judaism, including the prohibition of polygamy, the necessity of the wife consenting to divorce, the compassionate treatment of Jews who became apostates under compulsion, and the prohibition of opening correspondence addressed to another. The rule against polygamy was revolutionary, in that most Jews of the time lived in Islamic countries such as Babylonia and Spain, and still held polygamy to be acceptable.

Rashi (d. 1105) declared that all of the great rabbis of his own era were "students of his (Gershom's) students." In the fourteenth century, Rabbi Asher ben Jehiel wrote that Rabbeinu Gershom's writings were "such permanent fixtures that they may well have been handed down on Mount Sinai."

Biography

Rabbeinu Gershom studied under Judah ben Meir ha-Kohen, who was one of the greatest authorities of his time. Having lost his first wife, traditionally known as Judah's daughter Deborah, Gershom married a widow named Bonna and settled at Mainz, where he devoted himself to teaching the Talmud. He had many pupils from different countries, among whom were Eleazar ben Isaac and Jacob ben Yakar, the teacher of the great rabbinical sage Rashi. The fame of Gershom's learning eclipsed even that of the heads of the Babylonian academies of the Sura and Pumbedita, which until them had been preeminent.

During Gershom's lifetime Mainz became a center of Torah and Jewish scholarship for many Jewish communities in Europe that had formerly been connected with the Babylonian yeshivas. He became the spiritual leader of the fledgling Ashkenazic Jewish communities and was very influential in molding them at a time when their already small population was dwindling.

The most difficult halakhic questions were addressed to him by Jews from all quarters, and measures which he authorized had legal force among virtually all the Jews of Europe. In about the year 1000 he called a synod which decided the following particulars:

  • prohibition of polygamy
  • necessity of obtaining the consent of both parties to a divorce
  • showing compassion to those who became apostates under compulsion
  • prohibition of opening correspondence addressed to another

The first two of these are recognized as milestones of women's rights in Jewish tradition.

Gershom was also an active writer. He is celebrated for his works in the field of biblical exegesis, the Masorah (textual criticism), and lexicography. He revised and clarified the text of both the Mishnah and Talmud, the fundamental texts of rabbinical Judaism. He also wrote commentaries on several treatises of the Talmud which were very popular and provided the impulse for the production of many other works of the kind.

Mainz Cathedral was consecrated in Rabbeinu Gershom's day, presenting a glorious contrast to the devastation of the Temple of Jerusalem commemorated in Gershom's poem Zechor Berit Avraham.

Gershom also composed poetic penitential prayers, which were inspired by the bloody persecutions of his time, warning the people against sin. He is the author of Seliha 42—Zechor Berit Avraham ("Remember the Covenant of Abraham")—a liturgical poem recited by Ashkenazic Jews during the season of Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur:

"The Holy City and its regions
are turned to shame and to spoils
and all its desirable things are buried and hidden
and nothing is left except this Torah."

Gershom also left a large number of rabbinical responsa, which are scattered throughout various collections. His life reportedly conformed to his teachings.

Man of tolerance

Rabbeinu Gershom reportedly had a son who forsook the Jewish religion and became a Christian at the time of the expulsion of the Jews from Mainz in 1012. The young man later died before his father, without having returned to Judaism. Refusing to disown him spiritually, as many others would have done, Gershom grieved for his son, observing all the forms of Jewish mourning. His example in this regard became a rule for others in similar cases.

His tolerance also extended to those who had submitted to baptism to escape persecution and who afterward returned to the Jewish fold. He strictly prohibited reproaching them for their apostasy, and even gave those among them who had been slandered an opportunity to pray publicly in the synagogues.

Legends

As with many of the great rabbis of this and other periods, the life of Rabbeinu Gershom is surrounded with wonderful legends.

The story goes that as a young man, he had already won great renown as a scholar and example of righteousness. His teacher, Judah ben Meïr ha-Kohen, esteemed him so highly that he gave Gershom the hand of his daughter Deborah in marriage.

Soon after this Gershom and Deborah traveled to the Babylonian city of Pumbedita, where the renowned Sherira Gaon headed perhaps the greatest Talumdic academy in the world. The journey there was full of hardship and adventures.

In Pumbedita, Gershom spent several happy years devoting himself to the study of the Torah and Talmud. When he reached the point of becoming a teacher himself, he did not want to profit from his knowledge, but labored as a goldsmith, developing marvelous skill in this trade and settling in the great city of Constantinople, the most important trading center of the East.

While there, a tremendous fire swept through the city, leaving it in ruin, followed almost immediately by a horrible plague. Victims lay dying everywhere in the city's streets. Rabbeinu Gershom refused to sit passively and witness the suffering of his fellow men, even though they were not Jews. He had some knowledge of medicine as a result of his studies, and with utter selflessness he ministered to the sick.

Basil II of Constantinople

The Byzantine emperor Basil II ruled at Constantinople during this time. Although he personally was a good man, he was easily misled by his advisers, especially a certain John, and unrelenting Jew-hater. When the emperor consulted his advisers concerning the fire an plague, John blamed the Jews, ultimately persuading Basil to issue a decree expelling the Jews and confiscating their property.

Soon after this, however, Basil's daughter fell desperately ill. The greatest physicians of the empire were summoned to the palace to heal her, but none of them could effect a cure. When the news of the sick princess reached Rabbeinu Gershom, he immediately set out for the palace, despite the risk. According to the legend, Basil told him: "If you succeed in curing the princess I will reward you generously, but if you fail, you will lose your head!"

Gershom examined the princess, but he quickly realized that he was beyond human help. Only a miracle could save her. Gershom prayed to God with all his heart. "O G-d," he implored, "save this girl, for the sake of your people."

The color immediately came back to her, and with each day she grew stronger. The overjoyed emperor and empress were filled with gratitude to Gershom, and Basil offered him a rich reward of luxurious wealth. Gershom replied that the greatest reward he could receive would be the withdrawal of the decree against the Jews. Basil agreed, and soon the decree was annulled.

The Silver Throne

Scale model of Solomon's throne

Gershom now became Basil II's friend and close confident. One day, Gershom happened to tell the emperor the story of Solomon's wonderful golden throne. Knowing Gershom to be a goldsmith, Basil asked him to create such a throne for him. However, it turned our that there was not enough gold in the king's treasury for the task, so the throne was thus fashioned out of silver. So complicated was the task that it took several years to complete. When it was finished, a great festival was planned to celebrate its unveiling.

However, as Basil ascended the magnificent throne, he became confused about the operation of its marvelous hidden mechanisms. He thus asked Rabbeinu Gershom to ascend the throne before him and show him how it worked. Six silver steps led up the throne, each one flanked by two different animals, all cast of silver. As Gershom ascended, the animals marvelously extended their feet to support him. When he had reached the last step and took his seat, a huge silver eagle held the royal crown over Gershom's head. The courtiers broke out into enthusiastic cheers and applause. Gershom then descended and received the emperor's thanks, Basil proceeded to mount the throne and take his proper place.

The evil minister John, however, so jealous of Gershom's success that he determined to find a way to do away with him. John knew that some of the workmen had stolen silver during the throne's construction and conceived a plan to lay the blame on Gershom. "Let us weigh the throne and ascertain the truth," he told the king. Basil agreed, but there was no scale large enough to weigh the throne. The empire's greatest engineers all attempted to create a way to weigh the throne, but they all failed.

The one thing that brought sadness to Rabbeinu Gershom's heart was the fact that he had no children. His wife, like the matriarchs of the Bible, was barren, thus she encouraged him to take a second wife by whom he could perpetuate his lineage. This woman had many acquaintances in the royal household. Like Delilah before her, she used every possible womanly wile and finally succeeded in coaxing from him the secret of how to weigh the throne—by placing the throne in a boat and measuring the displacement of water which this created.

The woman, of course, immediately divulged the secret. When the throne was weighed, John's accusation seemed proven to be true, for the throne weighed substantially less than it should have. Basil summoned Gershom and informed him of the charges against him. Gershom explained that it must have been the workmen who stole the silver, but the emperor was now completely taken in by the evil John. He condemned Gershom to die unless agreed to be baptized as a Christian. Gershom refused to apostatize, and prepared to die. His one "consolation" was that, because he had saved the king's daughter, he would not be hanged, but would be imprisoned in a tower in an isolated desert. There, without any food or drink, he would starve to death.

Imprisoned in the tower, Gershom heard the sound of a woman crying. He looked out and saw his true wife, Deborah. "I have come to die with you," she said in tears. "I am glad you have come," Gershom replied, "but not to die with me. Find a woodworm and a beetle. Then get some silk thread, cord, and rope. Tie the silk thread about the beetle. Then tie the cord to the silk thread, and tie the rope to the cord. Let the worm crawl up the side of the tower and the beetle will pursue it, bringing the rope up to me."

About a week later, the wicked John awoke from his sleep and determined to go to the desert and satisfy himself that the Gershom had died. Taking the keys to the tower with him, John climbed up and opened the Gershom's cell, only to find it empty. In his shock, he allowed the door to close, and the key was still in the lock outside! He used all of his strength, but was unable to force it open. There, he himself began to suffer the fate originally intended for Gershom.

Rabbenu Gershom, meanwhile, stood with Deborah on the deck of a ship nearing the shores of his native land in France. Thus ends the legend. The rest, so they say, is history.

Legacy

Meor Hagolah (The Light of the Exile) is a fitting title for Rabbenu Gershom. He became a beacon of light for the Jews of the European diaspora. His yeshiva became the leading center of Jewish learning for the fledging Jewish community of France and Germany. Soon, through the work of such a gigantic figure as Rashi, his tradition would be enshrined for generations.

The halakhic rulings of Gershom Ben Judah are considered binding on all of Ashkenazic Jewry until the present day, although the basis for this is somewhat controversial. Some hold that his bans are still binding and others consider them to have technically expired but believe they nonetheless remain obligatory as universally accepted customs.

Some have speculated that if Rabbeinu Gershom had never lived, there may never have ever been what is today known as "Ashkenazic Judaism." In the words of the renowned Rashi (1040–1105), all of the great European rabbis of the coming generation were “students of his students.”

See also

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.

  • Biale, David. Cultures of the Jews: A New History. Schoken Books, 2002. ISBN 0805241310
  • Lehmann, Marcus. Rabbenu Gershom; Meor Hagolah, Light of the Exile. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Merkos L'inyonei Chinuch, 1968. OCLC 19565653
  • Petuchowski, Aaron M. Inconsistency for Good Reason: The Responsa of Rabbenu Gershom. New York: Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, 1983. OCLC 84994988
  • Shereshevsky, Esra. Rashi, the Man and His World. New York: Sepher-Hermon Press, 1982. ISBN 9780872031012
  • Vital, David. A People Apart: A History of the Jews in Europe. Oxford University Press, 1999. ISBN 0198219806

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