Difference between revisions of "Golem" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Mythical creatures]]
  
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In [[Jewish folklore]], a '''golem''' (from the [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] "gelem" ((גלם), meaning "raw material") is an animated being created entirely from inanimate matter, and given [[life]] through a mystical process involving the secret name of [[God]]. The most well-known golem in Jewish folklore was created by [[Rabbi Yehudah Loew]] of [[Prague]] in 1580 to protect the Jewish people from persecution by [[Christian]]s. Bringing a golem to life was understood to be a process that only those closest to God, the holiest people who had gained some of God's wisdom and power, could accomplish. However, the life that could be created by any man would always be less than that created by God. Thus, a golem was generally unable to speak, and had no [[free will]], always having to obey its maker.
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However, in many tales the golem outgrows his master physically, becoming dangerous both to people and property, and has to be deactivated. The notion of the golem, then, serves to remind us that only God can grant the highest kind of life, that with a [[soul]], and that human beings ought not seek to wield such power.
  
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==History of the term==
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The origins of the golem are often traced back to the ''Sefer HaYetzira'' (the "Book of Formation"), a [[Kabbalah|Kabbalistic]] text that deals with the process of the creation of the universe.<ref>Joyce Ellen Weinstein, [http://www.jewishmag.com/26mag/golem/golem.htm "The Golem"] ''The Jewish Magazine''. (October 1999). Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
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The [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] word "golem" has been interpreted in multiple ways. The term is used in the [[Bible]] (Psalms 139:16), as well as in [[Talmud|Talmudic]] literature to refer to an [[embryo]]nic or incomplete substance.<ref> [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9037287/golem "Golem"] ''Encyclopaedia Britannica Online.'' (2007). Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref> Commentaries on the [[Mishnah]], specifically the [[Pirkei avot]], use the term to refer to a person whose behavior is unbalanced, or "uncultivated," in contrast to "learned" or "wise" men. The word was incorporated into [[Yiddish]] to refer to a person who is stupid, clumsy, or inconsiderate.<ref>Abraham Skorka, [http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/en/agolemsb.htm "God, Man and Golem. Golem Aspects of Human Beings"] ''Jewish Museum in Prague.'' (2006). Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
  
In [[Jewish folklore]], a '''golem''' (from the [[Hebrew language|Hebrew "gelem" ((גלם), meaning "raw material") is an animated being created entirely from inanimate matter, and given life through a mystical process involving the secret name of [[God]]. The origins of the golem are often traced back to the "Sefer HaYetzera" (the "book of formation"), a [[Kabbalah|Kabbalistic]] text that deals with the process of the creation of the universe.<ref>Weinstein, Joyce Ellen. October 1999. [http://www.jewishmag.com/26mag/golem/golem.htm "The Golem"] The Jewish Magazine. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref> The most well-known golem in Jewish folklore was created by [[Rabbi Yehudah Leow]] of [[Prague]] in 1580 to protect the Jewish people from [[blood libel]], or allegations that Jews were killing [[Christian]] children and using their blood to make unleavened bread (matzah).
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References to golems occur as early as the scriptural description of creation; [[Adam and Eve|Adam]], the first man, is described as having been initially created as a golem. Formed from dust, Adam was a golem, or "shapeless mass," before becoming imbued with a [[soul]].<ref>[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=334&letter=G "Golem"] ''Jewish Encyclopedia.'' Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>  
  
==History of the Term==
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Like Adam, all golems are created from mud. They were a creation of those who were very holy and close to [[God]], striving to approach God, and in that pursuit gaining some of God's wisdom and power. One of these powers was the creation of [[life]]. No matter how holy a person became, however, a being created by that person would be but a shadow of one created by God.
The Hebrew word "golem" has been interpreted in multiple ways. The term is used in the [[Bible]] (Psalms 139:16), as well as in [[Talmud|Talmudic]] literature to refer to an embryonic or incomplete substance.<ref>2007. [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9037287/golem "Golem"] Encyclopaedia Britannica Online. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref> Commentaries on the [[Mishnah]], specifically the [[Pirkei avot]], use the term to refer to a person whose behavior is unbalanced, or "uncultivated", in contrast to "learned" or "wise" men. The word was incorporated into [[Yiddish]] to refer to a person who is stupid, clumsy, or inconsiderate.<ref>Skorka, Abraham. 2006. [http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/en/agolemsb.htm "God, Man and Golem. Golem Aspects of Human Beings" Jewish Museum in Prague. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
 
  
References to golems occur as early as the scriptural describtion of creation; [[Adam and Eve|Adam]], the first man, is described as having been initially created as a golem. Formed from dust, Adam was a golem, or "shapeless mass", before becoming imbued with a soul.<ref>[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=334&letter=G "Golem"] Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>  
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The first known instructions for the creation of a golem are found in commentaries on the [[Sefer Yetzirah]] during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The creation of a golem was first seen as a initiatory mystical experience. It was not until later that the golem came to be seen chiefly as a servile entity.<ref>Vladimir Sadek, [http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/en/agolemsb.htm "Rabbi Loew and the Tradition of the Golem"] ''Jewish Museum in Prague.'' Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
  
==Golem Legends==
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The creation of a golem was often viewed as a [[symbol]] of holiness, as only the very righteous could be successful at bringing the godly powers into inanimate clay. Persons attempting to create golems for improper or self-serving purposes would not be given the ability to do so.<ref>Joyce Ellen Weinstein,  [http://www.jewishmag.com/26mag/golem/golem.htm "The Golem"] ''The Jewish Magazine'' (October 1999). Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref> Golems were usually connected with [[rabbi]s during the [[Middle Ages]].
  
The first known instructions for the creation of a golem are found in commentaries on the [[Sefer Yetzirah]] during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The creation of a golem was first seen as a initiary mystical experience. It was not until later that the golem came to be seen chiefly as a servile entity.<ref>Sadek, Vladimir. [http://www.jewishmuseum.cz/en/agolemsb.htm "Rabbi Loew and the Tradition of the Golem"] Jewish Museum in Prague. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
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==Features of golems==
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The animation of a golem often involved the use of one of the secret [[Names of God in Judaism|names of God]], which were written on a slip of paper and attached to its forehead or arm, or on a clay tablet under the tongue, which could be removed to deactivate the golem. The word ''Emet'' (אמת, 'truth' in the [[Hebrew language]]) on the forehead was also commonly used to give golems life. By erasing the first letter in ''Emet'' to form ''Met'' (מת, 'dead' in Hebrew) the golem could be deactivated. In many tales, the golem is said to continue to grow until it dwarfs all members of the household and must be deactivated.
  
A sixteenth century [[rabbi]], Elijah of Chelm, is the first person credited with the creation of a golem using a [[shem]], or paper with the name of God written upon it. Similarly to the tale of [[Frankenstein]]'s monster, Elijah's golem grew to be a monster. Fearing the destruction of the world at the hands of his golem, the rabbi removed the shem from the golem's forehead, and the golem returned to dust.<ref>[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=334&letter=G "Golem"] Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>  
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In nearly all versions of golem legends, golems lack the power of speech and are unable to make [[morality|moral]] judgments. Since they are created by man, not God, they do not possess a [[soul]], and therefore can do no more than what is asked of them by their creator. In almost all [[Kabbalah|kabbalistic]] descriptions of golems, they are incapable of disobeying the one who created them. The theme of [[hubris]] is common to most golem tales, as with the tale of Rabbi Elias, who created a Golem that grew so large that the rabbi was unable to reach its forehead to erase the letter to deactivate it. The rabbi then commanded the golem to remove his boots, thinking that he would then be able to erase the letter, which worked exactly as planned. Unfortunately, once the golem was deactivated, it returned to clay, which fell upon the poor rabbi, crushing him.<ref>Hillel Kieval, "Pursuing the Golem of Prague: Jewish Culture and the Invention of a Tradition" ''Modern Judaism'' (1997).</ref> This type of hubris theme is common in stories of golems, where the creation of the golem often leads eventually to destruction, similar to the moral found in stories of the monster of ''[[Frankenstein]]''.
  
The most famous of golem legends also takes place in the sixteenth century. [[Rabbi Loew]], also known as the Maharal, reportedly created a golem to defent the Prague [[ghetto]] from [[Anti-Semitism|anti-Semetic]] attacks.  
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==Golem legends==
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Having a golem servant was seen as the ultimate symbol of wisdom and holiness, and there are many tales of golems connected to prominent [[rabbi]]s throughout the [[Middle Ages]].
  
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A sixteenth century rabbi, Elijah of Chelm, is the first person credited with the creation of a golem using a ''shem'', or paper with the name of [[God]] written upon it. Similar to the ''Frankenstein'' tale, Elijah's golem grew to be a monster. Fearing the destruction of the world at the hands of his golem, the rabbi removed the ''shem'' from the golem's forehead, and the golem returned to dust.<ref>[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=334&letter=G "Golem"] ''Jewish Encyclopedia''. Retrieved May 29, 2007.</ref>
  
==The classic narrative==
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===The Golem of Prague===
The most famous golem narrative involves Rabbi [[Judah Loew ben Bezalel|Judah Loew the Maharal]] of [[Prague]], a [[16th century]] [[rabbi]]. He is reported to have created a golem to defend the Prague [[ghetto]] of [[Josefov (Prague)|Josefov]] from [[Anti-Semitism|Anti-Semitic]] attacks. The story of Loew's golem was written by Wolf Pascheles in 1847, appearing in a collection of Jewish tales entitled ''Galerie der Sippurim''. Other accounts later followed, including the 1909 publication of the legend by Yudl Rosenberg, who was the first to mention [[blood libel]], and claimed to be publishing an original letter of Loew's, along with a manuscript by Loew's son-in-law.<ref>Zucker, Robert. [http://emol.org/kabbalah/seferyetzirah/seferyetzirahtimeline.html "Sefer Yetsirah
 
and Jewish Mysiticsm Time Line"] Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref> The tale appears in several variations.
 
  
According to legend, the Jews in Prague were being persecuted by the Christians, who often accused them of ritually murdering children to make matzah bread, known as "blood libel". Some even snuck into the Jewish [[ghetto]] to deposit the body of a child on Jewish streets, in an attempt to further incite people against the Jews. Rabbi Loew, always devoted to the welfare of his people, prayed for a vision to tell him how to stop these false accusations, and was told by [[Heaven]] to "make a human image of clay." The rabbi took his son-in-law and his favorite pupil down to the river, and formed the shape of a man from clay. They each walked around the figure seven times, reciting a [Kabbalah|Kabbalistic} formula, and the golem was brought to life. The golem appeared to be a man of thirty, and the Rabbi clothed him and named him Joseph. Through the use of an [[talisman]], the golem could appear invisible, and was sent out to stop anyone carrying a large parcel. When he found a person intending to deposit the body of a dead child in the Jewish streets, the golem would tie up the offender and the evidence, and carry both to the authorities. Once the blood libel was declared to be groundless and persecutions became forbidden, Rabbi Loew removed the breath of life from the golem Joseph by walking around the figure seven times, repeating the same words in reverse order.<ref>Ashliman, D.L. (Ed). 1999. [http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/golem.html "The Golem: A Jewish Legend"] Retrived May 31, 2007.</ref>
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The most famous golem narrative involves a sixteenth century [[rabbi]], Rabbi [[Judah Loew ben Bezalel|Judah Loew the Maharal]] of [[Prague]]. The story of Loew's golem, written by Wolf Pascheles in 1847, appeared in a collection of Jewish tales entitled ''Galerie der Sippurim''. Other accounts followed later, including the 1909 publication of the legend by Yudl Rosenberg, who was the first to mention the golem as defending Jews from those who would raise the nefarious [[blood libel]] (that Jews use human blood in certain of their religious rituals and magical rites) against them. Rosenberg claimed to be publishing an original letter of Loew's, along with a manuscript by Loew's son-in-law.<ref>Robert Zucker, [http://emol.org/kabbalah/seferyetzirah/seferyetzirahtimeline.html "Sefer Yetsirah and Jewish Mysticism Time Line"] Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref> The tale appears in several variations.
  
Other versions of the story involve destruction by the golem. In many versions, the golem becomes uncontrollable, wreaking havoc on the community or the entire city, attacking Jews, [[Gentiles]], and even Rabbi Loew. Many also claim that the golem was brought to life through the means of a shem, or piece of paper with a holy and magic word, placed in its mouth, which was subsequently removed to deactivate the golem. Other variations say that the word meaning "truth" was put on the golem's forehead to animate it; to return the golem to a lump of clay, the first letter was rubbed out, thus spelling "death". The golem has various powers, according to different legends: invisibility, a heated touch, and the ability to summon spirits of the dead to serve as witnesses for the crimes against the Jews. Many legends claim that remnants of the golem can still be found in the attic of the famous Prague synagogue [[Altneuschul]].
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According to the legend, the Jews in Prague were being persecuted by the Christians, who often accused them of ritually murdering children so they could use their blood to make matzah bread, an accusation known as "blood libel." Some of their persecutors even sneaked into the Jewish [[ghetto]] to deposit the body of a child on the street in an attempt to further incite people against them. Rabbi Loew, always devoted to the welfare of his people, prayed for a vision to tell him how to stop these false accusations, and was told by [[Heaven]] to "make a human image of clay." The rabbi took his son-in-law and his favorite student down to the river, and formed the shape of a man from clay. They each walked around the figure seven times, reciting a [[Kabbalah|Kabbalistic]] formula, and the golem was brought to life. The golem appeared to be a man of thirty, and the Rabbi clothed him and named him Joseph. Through the use of a [[talisman]], the golem could appear invisible, and was sent out to stop anyone carrying a large parcel. When a person was found intending to deposit the body of a dead child in the Jewish streets, the golem would tie up the offender and the evidence, and carry both to the authorities. Once the blood libel was declared to be groundless and persecutions became forbidden, Rabbi Loew removed the breath of life from the golem by walking around the figure seven times, repeating the same words in reverse order.<ref>D. L. Ashliman, [http://www.pitt.edu/~dash/golem.html "The Golem: A Jewish Legend"] (1999). Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref>
  
The legend of the Prague golem inspired [[Gustav Meyrink]]'s 1915 novel ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|Der Golem]]'', which in turn inspired [[Paul Wegener]]'s classic set of [[Expressionism (film)|expressionistic]] [[silent movies]], of which ''[[The Golem: How He Came Into the World]]'' (also released as ''The Golem'', 1920, USA 1921) is particularly famous. Another famous treatment from the same era is [[H. Leivick]]'s 1921 Yiddish-language "dramatic poem in eight sections" ''[[The Golem (Leivick)|The Golem]]''.  Also notable is [[Julien Duvivier]]'s "Le Golem" (1936), a sequel to the Wegener film. Nobel prize winner [[Isaac Bashevis Singer]] also wrote a version of the legend.
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Other versions of the story involve destruction by the golem. In many versions, the golem becomes uncontrollable, wreaking havoc on the community or the entire city, attacking Jews, [[Gentiles]], and even Rabbi Loew. Many versions also claim that the golem was brought to life through the means of a ''shem,'' or piece of paper with a holy and magic word, placed in its mouth, which was subsequently removed to deactivate the golem. Other variations say that the word meaning "truth" was put on the golem's forehead to animate it, and to return the golem to a lump of clay, the first letter was erased, thus spelling "death."
  
==Features of Golems==
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The golem has a variety of powers according to different legends: invisibility, a heated touch, and the ability to summon spirits of the dead to serve as witnesses for the crimes against the Jews. Some versions involve the Emperor of [[Austria]], who initiated the persecution of the Jews, and later beseeched Rabbi Loew to call off his golem. Many legends claim that remnants of the golem can still be found in the attic of the famous Prague synagogue [[Altneuschul]].
The creation of a golem was often viewed as a symbol of holiness, as only the very righteous are successful at bringing the godly powers into inanimate clay. Persons attempting to create golems for improper or self-serving purposes would not be given the ability to do so.<ref>Weinstein, Joyce Ellen. October 1999. [http://www.jewishmag.com/26mag/golem/golem.htm "The Golem"] The Jewish Magazine. Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref> Golems were usually connected with Rabbis throughout the [[Middle Ages]].
 
  
As in many of the tales of the Prague Golem, the animation of a golem often involved the use of one of the secret [[Names of God in Judaism|names of God]], which could be found on a slip of paper attached to its forehead, arm, or on a clay tablet under the tongue, which were removed to deactivate it. The word ''Emet'' (אמת, 'truth' in the [[Hebrew language]]) on its forehead was also commonly used to give golems life. By erasing the first letter in ''Emet'' to form ''Met'' (מת, 'dead' in Hebrew) the golem could be deactivated. The golem is often said to continue to grow until it dwarfs all members of the household and must be deactivated.
+
The legend of the Prague golem inspired [[Gustav Meyrink]]'s 1915 novel ''Der Golem,'' which in turn inspired [[Paul Wegener]]'s classic set of [[Expressionism (film)|expressionistic]] silent [[movie]]s, of which ''The Golem: How He Came Into the World'' (also released as ''The Golem,'' 1920, USA 1921) is particularly famous. Another famous treatment from the same era is [[H. Leivick]]'s 1921 Yiddish-language "dramatic poem in eight sections" ''The Golem.'' Also notable is [[Julien Duvivier]]'s "Le Golem" (1936), a sequel to the Wegener film. [[Nobel prize]] winner [[Isaac Bashevis Singer]] also wrote a version of the legend.
  
In nearly all versions of golem legends, golems lack the power of speech, as well as the inability to make moral judgements. Since they are created by man, not God, they do not possess a soul, and therefore can do no more than what is asked of them by their creator. In almost all Jewish kabbalistic descriptions of Golems, they are incapable of disobeying the one who created them. The theme of [[hubris]] is common to most golem tales, as with the tale of Rabbi Elias, who created a Golem that grew so large that the rabbi was unable to reach its forehead to erase the letter to deactivate it. The rabbi then commanded the golem to remove his boots, thinking that he would then be able to erase the letter, which worked exactly as planned. Unfortunately, once the golem was deactivated, it returned to clay, which fell upon the poor rabbi, crushing him.<ref>Kieval, Hillel. 1997. [http://www.jstor.org/view/02761114/ap050049/05a00020/2?frame=noframe&userID=898c40cf@newpaltz.edu/01cce4406100507acf2&dpi=3&config=jstor "Pursuing the Golem of Prague: Jewish Culture and the Invention of a Tradition"] Modern Judaism. Retrieved May 31, 2007.</ref> This type of [[hubris]] theme is common in stories of golems, where the creation of the golem often leads eventually to destruction, similar to the moral found in stories of the monster of ''[[Frankenstein]]'' and of the broomstick in ''[[The Sorcerer's Apprentice]]''.
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==The Golem in popular culture==
  
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Golem-like creatures appear in the [[folklore]] of other cultures. In [[Norse mythology]], for example, Mökkurkálfi (or Mistcalfa) was a clay giant, built to help the [[troll]] [[Hrungnir]] in a battle with [[Thor]]. The concept of golems has also found its way into a wide variety of books, comic books, films, television shows, and games. This use covers a wide range, from "golem" used as an umbrella term to refer to [[automata]] and [[simulacra]] made of anything from steel to flesh, to full adoptions of the golem mythos.  
==In popular culture==
 
The golem concept has found its way into a wide variety of books, comic books, films, television shows, and games. This use covers a wide range, from "golem" used as an [[umbrella term]] to refer to [[automata]] and [[simulacra]] made of anything from steel to flesh, via clay monsters called golems, to full adoptions of the golem mythos.
 
 
 
==Similar myths of other cultures==
 
 
 
In [[Norse mythology]], Mökkurkálfi (or Mistcalfa) was a clay giant, built to help the [[troll]] [[Hrungnir]] in a battle with [[Thor]].
 
 
 
Probably as a result of the popularity of [[Gustav Meyrink]]'s work ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|The Golem]]'', the golem concept has found its way into various elements of popular culture. Examples include:
 
 
 
==Books, Comic books==
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
* [[Nobel Prize]] winner [[Isaac Bashevis Singer]] wrote a retelling of the legend of the Golem in 1969.
 
 
 
* Edward Einhorn's ''Golem Stories'' appearing in his book of plays entitled ''[http://www.untitledtheater.com/GMS.htm The Golem, Methuselah, and Shylock]'' includes a golem that has the soul of a young man who was the fiance of the Rabbi's daughter.
 
 
 
* Also inspired in part by the story of the Golem of Prague, [[Ted Chiang]] wrote a short story ''[[Seventy-Two Letters]]'' which explores the role of language in the creation of golems. The story won the [[Sidewise Award for Alternate History]] in 2000. It can be found in the collection ''[[Stories of Your Life and Others]]''.
 
 
 
* [[Karel Capek|Karel Čapek]]'s 1921 play ''[[R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots)]]'' included robots which are not machines, but synthetic humans made from a claylike goo.
 
 
 
* The [[DC Comics]]'s ''[[Detective Comics]]'' # 631 features the beginning of a two-part [[Batman]] story: "The Golem of Gotham" by [[Peter Milligan]] and [[Jim Aparo]]. In it, Batman confronts a clay golem made by an elderly [[Holocaust]] survivor, in the context of modern race riots.
 
 
 
* The Golem appears in [[Neil Gaiman]]'s novel ''[[American Gods]]'' with a host of other gods in the climax of the novel.
 
 
 
* A golem most commonly in the shape of a hobo is used by a psychic evil doer to intimidate and kill its victims in the novel ''Dragon Tears'' by [[Dean Koontz]].
 
 
 
 
 
==Films and TV==
 
* The first trilogy of movies about Rabbi Judah Loew and his golem were Der Golem (1915), the Golem and the Dancing Girl (1917), and The Golem: How He Came Into the World - [[The Golem: How He Came Into the World|Der Golem, wie er in die welt kam]] (1920) Directed by [[Paul Wegener]]. Only the last film, which is a [[prequel]], has survived, though stills exist of the earlier films.
 
 
 
* The British film "[[It! (1966 film)|It!]]" showcases the Golem of Prague constructed by [[Judah Loew ben Bezalel|Rabbi Judah Loew]] in the mid [[16th century]]. It is evoked (brought to life) by a mad assistant museum curator, Arthur Pimm ([[Roddy McDowell]]), and proves to be indestructible. The American expert in the story discusses the reason for the golem's construction, i.e. to protect the Jewish community, but warns of the possibility that the Golem could run amuck as he states it did in the past.
 
* The television program ''[[The X-Files]]'' aired an episode, "[[Kaddish (The X-Files episode)|Kaddish]]," in which a young [[Hasidic]] woman creates a Golem who avenges her husband's murder by [[neo-Nazi]]s.
 
 
 
==Golems in modern games==
 
<!--Discuss on talk before adding more games —>
 
Golems also appear as a popular feature of the [[Dungeons & Dragons]] [[role-playing game]]s and are almost ubiquitous in the many fantasy computer and card games inspired by it, such as [[NetHack]], [[Jade Empire]], the [[Dragon Quest]], [[Warcraft]], [[Diablo (computer game)|Diablo]] series, [[Ragnarok Online]], and [[Magic: The Gathering]]. In these games the word is generally used as an [[umbrella term]] to refer to [[automata]] and [[simulacra]] from many mythologies. The convention is that they are named after the material of construction. Examples include clay golems (most like the original Jewish golem), flesh golems (reminiscent of [[Frankenstein's monster]]), iron golems (animated metal statues), and a host of others including (but not limited to) gold, stone, blood, and even paper golems. The Pokémon [[Regirock]], [[Regice]], [[Registeel]] and [[Regigigas]] are loosely based on Golems, Another one, [[Golem (Pokemon)|Golem]] was named after said creature.
 
 
 
In the [[Tecmo]]'s [[Xbox 360]] and [[PlayStation 3]] [[JRPG]] [[Enchanted Arms]] artifact creatures are called "Golem." Some very powerful golem generated an ancient struggle called The Golem War, which caused entire civilizations to crumble.
 
 
 
There is a long list of other games which have creatures called "golems," made of clay, or are animated by writing on them, since the golem has become part of the generic stable of game characters.
 
 
 
<!-- But that list should not appear here. See talk.—>
 
<!--Discuss on talk before adding more games —>
 
 
 
==Other media==
 
 
 
In America, the opera 'The Golem' by Abraham Ellstein retells in 20th-century harmonic language the centuries-old tale of a creature fashioned from clay and brought to life by kabbalistic spells who ultimately threatens the very people he was intended to serve. Selections are available on disc from the Milken Archive of American Jewish music. Another opera with the same title has been written by British composer [[John Casken]].
 
  
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Golems have appeared in novels such as Neil Gaiman's ''American Gods'', as well as issue #631 of ''Detective Comics'', where Batman must confront a golem created by an elderly [[Holocaust]] survivor. The golem has also been featured in [[film]], as well as [[television]] shows like the ''X-files'' where a young [[Hasidic]] woman creates a golem to avenge her husband's murder by [[neo-Nazi]]s. Golems are also often found in [[fantasy]]-based video and [[role playing game]]s. The golem has even been the subject of [[opera]], with the American opera ''The Golem'' by Abraham Ellstein, as well as the opera of the same name by British composer [[John Casken]].
  
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==Notes==
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<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
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*Bilski, Emily D. (Ed.) 1989. ''Golem! Danger, Deliverance and Art''. The Jewish Museum. ISBN 0873340493
* Moshe Idel. ''Golem: Jewish Magical and Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid''. State University of New York Press, 1990.
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*Dennis, Geoffrey. 2007. ''The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism''. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 0738709050
 
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*Goldsmith, Arnold L. 1981. ''The Golem Remembered 1909-1980: Variations of a Jewish Legend.'' Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0814316832
* Gershon Winkler. ''The Golem of Prague: A New Adaptation of the Documented Stories of the Golem of Prague''. Judaica Press, 1980.
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*Idel, Moshe. 1990. ''Golem: Jewish Magical and Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid''. State University of New York Press. ISBN 079140160X
 
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*Neugroschel, Joachim. 2006. ''The Golem: A New Translation of the Classic Play and Selected Short Stories''. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0393050882
*Geoffrey Dennis, ''The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism'', Llewellyn Worldwide, 2007.
+
*Winkler, Gershon. 1980. ''The Golem of Prague: A New Adaptation of the Documented Stories of the Golem of Prague''. Judaica Press. ISBN 0910818258
 
 
* Emily D. Bilski (Ed.) ''Golem! Danger, Deliverance and Art''. The Jewish Museum, 1988.
 
 
 
* Arnold L. Goldsmith. ''The Golem Remembered 1909-1980: Variations of a Jewish Legend.'' Wayne State University Press, 1981.  
 
 
 
* Maureen T. Krause. "Introduction: Bereshit bara Elohim, A Survey of the Genesis and Evolution of the Golem." ''Journal of the Fantastic'', 7.2/3, pages 113-36.
 
 
 
* Norma Comrada. "Golem and Robot: The Search for Connections." ''[http://www.artsandletters.fau.edu/jfa/jfa.htm Journal of the Fantastic]'', 7.2/3, pages 244-54.
 
 
 
* Jonathan Stroud. "The Golem's Eye." Corgi, 2004.
 
 
 
* Marge Piercy. "Body of Glass." Penguin, 1993.
 
 
 
* Jorge Luis Borges. ''The Golem''. "Selected Poems." Penguin, 1999.
 
 
 
* Frances Sherwood.  ''The Book of Splendor''. W. W. Norton, 2002.
 
 
 
* Joachim Neugroschel. ''The Golem: A New Translation of the Classic Play and Selected Short Stories''. W. W. Norton, 2006.
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.untitledtheater.com/Golem%20Facts.htm Historical Figures from the Golem Legend]
+
All links retrieved June 26, 2017.
*[http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/~kvander/golem/backgroundgolem.html Background on the Golem Legends]
+
*[http://www.untitledtheater.com/Golem%20Facts.htm Historical Figures from the Golem Legend]  
*[http://www.sff.net/people/d.honigsberg/ravasman.htp Rava's Golem] (essay in the Summer '96 issue of the ''Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts'')
+
*[http://www.prague-life.com/prague/golem Prague's Golem]  
*[http://www.jewishmag.com/26mag/golem/golem.htm The Golem]
 
*[http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/6960/golem.htm The Golem in Literature, Film, and Stage]
 
*[http://www.prague-life.com/prague/golem Prague's Golem]
 
*[http://www.golemgroup.com/ The Golem Group] (robot builders)
 
*[http://demo.cs.brandeis.edu/golem The Golem Project - Automatic design and manufacture of robotic lifeforms]
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
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{{Credits|Golem|128300444|Golem_in_popular_culture|128574476|}}

Latest revision as of 11:55, 24 January 2023


Rabbi Loew and golem.

In Jewish folklore, a golem (from the Hebrew "gelem" ((גלם), meaning "raw material") is an animated being created entirely from inanimate matter, and given life through a mystical process involving the secret name of God. The most well-known golem in Jewish folklore was created by Rabbi Yehudah Loew of Prague in 1580 to protect the Jewish people from persecution by Christians. Bringing a golem to life was understood to be a process that only those closest to God, the holiest people who had gained some of God's wisdom and power, could accomplish. However, the life that could be created by any man would always be less than that created by God. Thus, a golem was generally unable to speak, and had no free will, always having to obey its maker.

However, in many tales the golem outgrows his master physically, becoming dangerous both to people and property, and has to be deactivated. The notion of the golem, then, serves to remind us that only God can grant the highest kind of life, that with a soul, and that human beings ought not seek to wield such power.

History of the term

The origins of the golem are often traced back to the Sefer HaYetzira (the "Book of Formation"), a Kabbalistic text that deals with the process of the creation of the universe.[1] The Hebrew word "golem" has been interpreted in multiple ways. The term is used in the Bible (Psalms 139:16), as well as in Talmudic literature to refer to an embryonic or incomplete substance.[2] Commentaries on the Mishnah, specifically the Pirkei avot, use the term to refer to a person whose behavior is unbalanced, or "uncultivated," in contrast to "learned" or "wise" men. The word was incorporated into Yiddish to refer to a person who is stupid, clumsy, or inconsiderate.[3]

References to golems occur as early as the scriptural description of creation; Adam, the first man, is described as having been initially created as a golem. Formed from dust, Adam was a golem, or "shapeless mass," before becoming imbued with a soul.[4]

Like Adam, all golems are created from mud. They were a creation of those who were very holy and close to God, striving to approach God, and in that pursuit gaining some of God's wisdom and power. One of these powers was the creation of life. No matter how holy a person became, however, a being created by that person would be but a shadow of one created by God.

The first known instructions for the creation of a golem are found in commentaries on the Sefer Yetzirah during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The creation of a golem was first seen as a initiatory mystical experience. It was not until later that the golem came to be seen chiefly as a servile entity.[5]

The creation of a golem was often viewed as a symbol of holiness, as only the very righteous could be successful at bringing the godly powers into inanimate clay. Persons attempting to create golems for improper or self-serving purposes would not be given the ability to do so.[6] Golems were usually connected with [[rabbi]s during the Middle Ages.

Features of golems

The animation of a golem often involved the use of one of the secret names of God, which were written on a slip of paper and attached to its forehead or arm, or on a clay tablet under the tongue, which could be removed to deactivate the golem. The word Emet (אמת, 'truth' in the Hebrew language) on the forehead was also commonly used to give golems life. By erasing the first letter in Emet to form Met (מת, 'dead' in Hebrew) the golem could be deactivated. In many tales, the golem is said to continue to grow until it dwarfs all members of the household and must be deactivated.

In nearly all versions of golem legends, golems lack the power of speech and are unable to make moral judgments. Since they are created by man, not God, they do not possess a soul, and therefore can do no more than what is asked of them by their creator. In almost all kabbalistic descriptions of golems, they are incapable of disobeying the one who created them. The theme of hubris is common to most golem tales, as with the tale of Rabbi Elias, who created a Golem that grew so large that the rabbi was unable to reach its forehead to erase the letter to deactivate it. The rabbi then commanded the golem to remove his boots, thinking that he would then be able to erase the letter, which worked exactly as planned. Unfortunately, once the golem was deactivated, it returned to clay, which fell upon the poor rabbi, crushing him.[7] This type of hubris theme is common in stories of golems, where the creation of the golem often leads eventually to destruction, similar to the moral found in stories of the monster of Frankenstein.

Golem legends

Having a golem servant was seen as the ultimate symbol of wisdom and holiness, and there are many tales of golems connected to prominent rabbis throughout the Middle Ages.

A sixteenth century rabbi, Elijah of Chelm, is the first person credited with the creation of a golem using a shem, or paper with the name of God written upon it. Similar to the Frankenstein tale, Elijah's golem grew to be a monster. Fearing the destruction of the world at the hands of his golem, the rabbi removed the shem from the golem's forehead, and the golem returned to dust.[8]

The Golem of Prague

The most famous golem narrative involves a sixteenth century rabbi, Rabbi Judah Loew the Maharal of Prague. The story of Loew's golem, written by Wolf Pascheles in 1847, appeared in a collection of Jewish tales entitled Galerie der Sippurim. Other accounts followed later, including the 1909 publication of the legend by Yudl Rosenberg, who was the first to mention the golem as defending Jews from those who would raise the nefarious blood libel (that Jews use human blood in certain of their religious rituals and magical rites) against them. Rosenberg claimed to be publishing an original letter of Loew's, along with a manuscript by Loew's son-in-law.[9] The tale appears in several variations.

According to the legend, the Jews in Prague were being persecuted by the Christians, who often accused them of ritually murdering children so they could use their blood to make matzah bread, an accusation known as "blood libel." Some of their persecutors even sneaked into the Jewish ghetto to deposit the body of a child on the street in an attempt to further incite people against them. Rabbi Loew, always devoted to the welfare of his people, prayed for a vision to tell him how to stop these false accusations, and was told by Heaven to "make a human image of clay." The rabbi took his son-in-law and his favorite student down to the river, and formed the shape of a man from clay. They each walked around the figure seven times, reciting a Kabbalistic formula, and the golem was brought to life. The golem appeared to be a man of thirty, and the Rabbi clothed him and named him Joseph. Through the use of a talisman, the golem could appear invisible, and was sent out to stop anyone carrying a large parcel. When a person was found intending to deposit the body of a dead child in the Jewish streets, the golem would tie up the offender and the evidence, and carry both to the authorities. Once the blood libel was declared to be groundless and persecutions became forbidden, Rabbi Loew removed the breath of life from the golem by walking around the figure seven times, repeating the same words in reverse order.[10]

Other versions of the story involve destruction by the golem. In many versions, the golem becomes uncontrollable, wreaking havoc on the community or the entire city, attacking Jews, Gentiles, and even Rabbi Loew. Many versions also claim that the golem was brought to life through the means of a shem, or piece of paper with a holy and magic word, placed in its mouth, which was subsequently removed to deactivate the golem. Other variations say that the word meaning "truth" was put on the golem's forehead to animate it, and to return the golem to a lump of clay, the first letter was erased, thus spelling "death."

The golem has a variety of powers according to different legends: invisibility, a heated touch, and the ability to summon spirits of the dead to serve as witnesses for the crimes against the Jews. Some versions involve the Emperor of Austria, who initiated the persecution of the Jews, and later beseeched Rabbi Loew to call off his golem. Many legends claim that remnants of the golem can still be found in the attic of the famous Prague synagogue Altneuschul.

The legend of the Prague golem inspired Gustav Meyrink's 1915 novel Der Golem, which in turn inspired Paul Wegener's classic set of expressionistic silent movies, of which The Golem: How He Came Into the World (also released as The Golem, 1920, USA 1921) is particularly famous. Another famous treatment from the same era is H. Leivick's 1921 Yiddish-language "dramatic poem in eight sections" The Golem. Also notable is Julien Duvivier's "Le Golem" (1936), a sequel to the Wegener film. Nobel prize winner Isaac Bashevis Singer also wrote a version of the legend.

The Golem in popular culture

Golem-like creatures appear in the folklore of other cultures. In Norse mythology, for example, Mökkurkálfi (or Mistcalfa) was a clay giant, built to help the troll Hrungnir in a battle with Thor. The concept of golems has also found its way into a wide variety of books, comic books, films, television shows, and games. This use covers a wide range, from "golem" used as an umbrella term to refer to automata and simulacra made of anything from steel to flesh, to full adoptions of the golem mythos.

Golems have appeared in novels such as Neil Gaiman's American Gods, as well as issue #631 of Detective Comics, where Batman must confront a golem created by an elderly Holocaust survivor. The golem has also been featured in film, as well as television shows like the X-files where a young Hasidic woman creates a golem to avenge her husband's murder by neo-Nazis. Golems are also often found in fantasy-based video and role playing games. The golem has even been the subject of opera, with the American opera The Golem by Abraham Ellstein, as well as the opera of the same name by British composer John Casken.

Notes

  1. Joyce Ellen Weinstein, "The Golem" The Jewish Magazine. (October 1999). Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  2. "Golem" Encyclopaedia Britannica Online. (2007). Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  3. Abraham Skorka, "God, Man and Golem. Golem Aspects of Human Beings" Jewish Museum in Prague. (2006). Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  4. "Golem" Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  5. Vladimir Sadek, "Rabbi Loew and the Tradition of the Golem" Jewish Museum in Prague. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  6. Joyce Ellen Weinstein, "The Golem" The Jewish Magazine (October 1999). Retrieved May 31, 2007.
  7. Hillel Kieval, "Pursuing the Golem of Prague: Jewish Culture and the Invention of a Tradition" Modern Judaism (1997).
  8. "Golem" Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved May 29, 2007.
  9. Robert Zucker, "Sefer Yetsirah and Jewish Mysticism Time Line" Retrieved May 31, 2007.
  10. D. L. Ashliman, "The Golem: A Jewish Legend" (1999). Retrieved May 31, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bilski, Emily D. (Ed.) 1989. Golem! Danger, Deliverance and Art. The Jewish Museum. ISBN 0873340493
  • Dennis, Geoffrey. 2007. The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 0738709050
  • Goldsmith, Arnold L. 1981. The Golem Remembered 1909-1980: Variations of a Jewish Legend. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0814316832
  • Idel, Moshe. 1990. Golem: Jewish Magical and Mystical Traditions on the Artificial Anthropoid. State University of New York Press. ISBN 079140160X
  • Neugroschel, Joachim. 2006. The Golem: A New Translation of the Classic Play and Selected Short Stories. W. W. Norton. ISBN 0393050882
  • Winkler, Gershon. 1980. The Golem of Prague: A New Adaptation of the Documented Stories of the Golem of Prague. Judaica Press. ISBN 0910818258

External links

All links retrieved June 26, 2017.

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