Me'am Lo'ez
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Me'am Lo'ez (Hebrew: מעם לועז), initiated by Rabbi Yaakov Culi in 1730, is a widely studied commentary on the Tanakh written in Ladino - it is perhaps the best known publication in that language.
Contents |
[edit] Content
In Rabbi Culi's time, few individuals in Turkey were familiar with the Hebrew language and found the Torah to be inaccessible. Rabbi Culi thus undertook the "colossal task" of writing a compendium of the major fields of Torah study. The commentary was to be user-friendly and was thus written in Ladino, the Jewish dialect spoken by the Jews in Turkey. The book was divided according to the weekly Torah portions (or Parshas); Rabbi Culi explains each chapter in detail according to the Midrash and Talmud. In his introduction Rabbi Culi personally guarantees that "everyone who reads the Me'am Loez every day will be able to answer in Heaven that he has learned the whole Torah, because all aspects of the Torah are covered on it".
[edit] Authorship
While Rabbi Culi had started the project he died only two years later after completing the book of Genesis and 2/3 of Exodus. Nonetheless, due to its mass popularity - and the extensive notes already written by Rabbi Culi - a decision was taken to complete the commentaries. Rabbi Yitzhak Magriso completed Exodus, and wrote the commentary on the books of Leviticus and Numbers. Deuteronomy was done by Rabbi Yitzhak Bechor Agruiti. The commentary on Joshua was written by Rabbi Rachamim Menachem Mitrani. The Book of Esther was done by Rabbi Raphael Chiyya Pontremoli. Rabbi Shmeul Yerushalmi translated the works into Hebrew, although greatly deviated from the originals on their Nach commentaries and the book of Avoth. He also continued the Meam Loez work in Hebrew on many of the books of Nach that the sages before him did not write.
[edit] Translations
The Me'am Loez quickly became extremely popular in the Jewish communities of Turkey, Spain, Morocco and Egypt. With the decline of Ladino after the Holocaust, various translations were produced, and the work can still be found in many Orthodox synagogues to this day. In 1967, a Hebrew translation, Yalkut Me'am Lo'ez, was produced by Rabbi Shmuel Kravitzer. The first English translation, the Torah Anthology, was written (primarily) by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan[1]; this translation has introduced Me'am Lo'ez to the Ashkenazi world. (In 1964, two Catholic scholars from the University of Granada produced a modern Spanish printing. "Apparently, their lack of knowledge regarding both Turkish and Ladino resulted in an edition filled with inaccuracies" [1].)
[edit] External links
- Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan on Rabbi Yaakov Culi and Me'am Lo'ez
- International Sephardic Leadership Council on Me'am Lo'ez
- Index to many commentaries
- Moznaim: Me'am Lo'ez / Torah Anthology
[edit] References
- ^ Kaplan, Aryeh, The Torah Anthology, Maznaim Publishing Corporation, 1977