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Tales of the Hasidim

Tales of the Hasidim( )
Author: Buber, Martin
Buber, Martin
ISBN:978-0-8052-0995-2
Publication Date:Jul 1991
Publisher:Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Imprint:Schocken
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $24.95
Book Description:

Two volumes of the Jewish philosopher's classic work that collects and retells the marvelous legends of Hasidism. This new paperback edition brings together volumes one and two of Buber's classic work Tales of the Hasidim, with a new foreword by Chaim Potok. Martin Buber devoted forty years of his life to collecting and retelling the legends of Hasidim. "Nowhere in the last centuries," wrote Buber in Hasidim and Modern Man, "has the soul-force of...
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Book Details
Pages:736
Detailed Subjects: Religion / Judaism / Orthodox
Religion / Inspirational
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):5.304 x 7.956 x 1.287 Inches
Book Weight:1.276 Pounds
Author Biography
Buber, Martin (Author)
Martin Buber was born in Vienna, the son of Solomon Buber, a scholar of Midrashic and medieval literature. Martin Buber studied at the universities of Vienna, Leipzig, Zurich, and Berlin, under Wilhelm Dilthey and Georg Simmel. As a young student, he joined the Zionist movement, advocating the renewal of Jewish culture as opposed to Theodor Herzl's political Zionism. At age 26 he became interested in Hasidic thought and translated the tales of Nahman of Bratslav.

Hasidism had a profound impact on Buber's thought. He credited it as being the inspiration for his theories of spirituality, community, and dialogue. Buber is responsible for bringing Hasidism to the attention of young German intellectuals who previously had scorned it as the product of ignorant eastern European Jewish peasants.

Buber also wrote about utopian socialism, education, Zionism, and respect for the Palestinian Arabs, and, with Franz Rosenzweig, he translated the Bible. He was appointed to a professorship at the University of Frankfurt in 1925, but, when the Nazis came to power, he received an appointment at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Buber died in 1965.

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