Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rabbi Yom-Tov Lipmann ben Nathan ben Moses ha-Levi Heller (Hebrew: רבי יום-טוב ליפמן הלר) (b. Wallerstein, Bavaria, 1579; d. Kraków, September 7, 1654) was a Bohemian rabbi and liturgical poet, best-known for writing a commentary on the Mishnah called the Tosefot Yom-Tov (1614-7).

Contents

[edit] Education

Rabbi Yom Tov Lipman Heller was brought up by his grandfather, Rabbi Moses Heller, chief rabbi of the German communities. He was sent to Friedburg, where he studied under Rabbi Jacob Günzburg. There he was invited to Prague by a rich merchant, Aaron Ashkenazi, who later became his father-in-law. There he studied under Rabbi Judah Löw ben Bezaleel, head of the yeshiva of Prague. R' Heller's second master was Rabbi Solomon Ephraim Lenczyza, chief rabbi of Prague. At Prague, R' Heller perfected his rabbinical studies. In 1597, when he was scarcely eighteen years old, he was appointed dayan in that city.

In October 1624, R' Heller was called to the rabbinate of Nikolsburg, Moravia, and in March 1625, became rabbi of Vienna. There he reorganized the community and drew up its constitution. R' Heller obtained for the Viennese Jews the privilege of having their ghetto located in Leopoldstadt.

[edit] Family

R' Heller was part of a long line of rabbis. He was the son of R' Nathan, who was the son of Rabbi Moses Heller.

[edit] Chief rabbi of Prague

In 1627 R' Heller was called to the chief rabbinate of Prague. On account of the Thirty Years' War the government imposed heavy taxes on the Jewish communities of Bohemia, including that of Prague, which had to pay a yearly tax of 40,000 thalers. A commission consisting of the more prominent and wealthy members of the Jewish community was created to apportion the taxes among the people. Sadly, the members of this commission abused their positions and apportioned an undue burden of the taxes among the poor. R' Heller would not countenance such injustice and despite enormous pressure, used his position as Chief Rabbi to ensure fairness. This drew the ire of the wealthy, powerful members of the commission, some of whom then accused R' Heller of insulting Christianity and reported this to the Emperor.

In response, Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II commanded the governor of Prague to send R' Heller in chains to Vienna, but the supplications of the leading Jews of Prague combined with the esteem which the Christian officials had for R' Heller spared him that indignity. The Jews pledged themselves that he would present himself before his judges even if allowed to go alone. R' Heller accordingly set out for Vienna on Tuesday, Tammuz 5, 5389 (June 25, 1629), and arrived there on the following Sunday.

[edit] Imprisonment

On Tammuz 17, the Jewish fast-day, he was imprisoned together with common criminals. The Jews of Vienna, however, obtained his transfer to another prison.

A clerical commission was appointed to inquire into R' Heller's guilt. It met on July 15, and among other questions R' Heller was asked how he dared to eulogize the Talmud after it had been burned by papal order. R' Heller justified himself very adroitly but the verdict was that R' Heller properly deserved death. The emperor, however, commuted the punishment to a fine of 12,000 thalers, to be paid immediately, and the incriminated writings to be destroyed. The fine was far beyond R' Heller's means; but the order was explicit that in default of payment R' Heller was to be stripped and flogged in the public squares of Vienna and Prague. The Jews again intervened in his behalf, and the fine was reduced to 10,000 florins, to be paid in installments. By the help of generous Jews, R' Heller was enabled to pay the first installment of 2,000 florins. Finally, after a confinement of forty days, he was released on August 14, but was deprived of his office and left without means. His enemies, in addition, obtained an imperial decision to the effect that R' Heller might not officiate as rabbi in any town of the Holy Roman Empire. He returned to Prague on September 26, and was confined to his bed for three months. In the meantime, his friends secured a partial withdrawal of the decision regarding the rabbinate.

Helped by friends, R' Heller was able to wait for better times and to pay the remaining installments of his fine. In 1632 he was called to the rabbinate of Nemirow, government of Podolsk, Russia, and three years later he became rabbi of Ludmir, Volhynia. He attended the fairs of Yaroslavl and Kremenets', where the Council of Four Lands met, and obtained the renewal of the synodal decrees against simony in the rabbinate. But he thereby made for himself many enemies, who calumniated him before the governor of Volhynia. The latter directed R' Heller to quit the town, but the more influential Jews of Warsaw succeeded in having the order withdrawn.

A book called Megillat Eivah (Scroll of Hostility) by Rabbi Heller and appended by his son Samuel relates the story of his imprisonment and trial. Notably, the Rabbi was helped by Turenne, ambassador of the court of King Louis XIV of France, after Samuel's dramatic life-saving of Turenne's wife and infant daughter at a park in Vienna, when they were attacked by a raging bull. Turenne later became the chief of the armed forces of France. The tradition of reading of this Megillah became a tradition for the descendants of Rabbi Heller, who, to this day, celebrate the story of his life in a very special Purim celebration, typically on Rosh Chodesh Adar, the first day of the month that Purim is celebrated in the Book of Esther.

[edit] Rabbi at Kraków

In the autumn of 1643 R' Heller received an invitation to the rabbinate of Kraków, which he gladly accepted. Joshua Heschel, the author of Maginne Shelomoh, was head of the yeshiva there. Four years later Heschel died, and R' Heller succeeded him in the direction of the yeshiva. At Kraków R' Heller released a large number of agunoth (women whose marital status is uncertain because their husbands may be either dead or alive) created by the persecutions that the Jews had suffered at the hands of the Cossacks. He established the 5th of Tammuz, the day on which his troubles began, as a perpetual fast-day in his family, and the 1st of Adar as a day of mirth to commemorate his nomination to the rabbinate of Kraków.

R' Heller was twice married and had four sons and five daughters. The sons, whom he mentions in his works, were: Moses of Prague, Samuel of Nemirow, Abraham of Lublin, and Löb of Brest-Litovsk. Moses Zacuto wrote an elegy on R' Heller's death in 1654.

[edit] Knowledge and works

R' Heller was a recognized authority in matters of ritual. He explained the Talmud without recourse to casuistry. He also was a kabbalist, and appreciated the Zohar and other Kabbalistic works and even authored himself sever works in Kabbalah (a commentary on Rabeinu Bachya and an introduction to Kabbalah based on the works of the Rama"k - Rabbi Moshe Cordovero ztz"l), but he never deviated from plain interpretation as regards the Halakha. He was also versed in the secular sciences. His commentary on the Mishnah shows that he was a good mathematician and his notes on the Gib'at ha Moreh of Joseph ben Isaac ha-Levi prove that he occupied himself with philosophy. His judgment was impartial; he praised the Me'or 'Enayim of Azariah dei Rossi in spite of the anathema that his master, Löw ben Bezaleel, whom he held in great esteem, had launched against the book and its author. He was also a good linguist and a Hebrew stylist; his authority as such was recognized by Samuel Archevolti, who sent R' Heller his Arugat ha-Bosem for examination. "The Fast and the Feast" was a book written by R' Heller and his son which describes the imprisonment, trial and related events. In an interesting anecdote from the book, R' Heller, after finally being released from prison, confronted one of his accusers. R' Heller expressed no anger- only curiosity. The individual retorted that he was insulted by R' Heller when R' Heller interpreted a Talmudic topic at odds with his. R' Heller's son writes that every one of R' Heller's accusers succumbed to an early death.

A well known story about R' Heller concerns a miserable miser in the town who died, and R' Heller was asked where to bury him. The town leaders were disgusted by this man's lack of charity, and directed that his body be buried in the most lowly section of the cemetery- in a far corner. A few days after the miser's death, a great cry was heard in the town, for the poor and hungry were bereft of the miser's secret generosity. It seems the "miser" was secretly giving money to the local merchants who in turn gave food , clothing and money to the poor. This miser was giving charity in the most noble of fashions- without he or the receiver knowing one another. When this came to R' Heller's attention, he was visibly shaken. He instructed the town to bury him next to the miser upon his own death. This explains why R' Heller, one of the greatest Talmudic scholars, is buried in such an undistinguished section of the cemetery.

[edit] References

Languages