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Abraham Abulafia's "Light of the Intellect" 1285, Vat. ebr. 597 leaf 113 recto
'Abraham ben Samuel Abulafia' (
Hebrew: 'אברהם בן שמואל אבולעפיה') was born in
Saragosa, Spain in
1240, and died sometime after
1291, in
Comino,
Maltese archipelago.
He was the founder of a unique ''
kabbalah'' (mystical tradition), known as "ecstatic kabbalah" or ''qabbalah nevu'it.'' He was a student of the writings of
Moses Maimonides and of
Hillel of Verona. Abulafia's writings include ''Sefer haYashar'' (The Book of the Righteous), ''Sefer ha-Ot'' (The Book of the Sign), ''Or HaSechel'' (Light of the Intellect), ''Imre Shefer'' (Words of Beauty), ''Get HaShmot'', ''Gan Na'ul'' (commentary on ''
Sefer Yetzirah''), ''Otzar Eden Ganuz'' (another commentary on ''Sefer Yetzirah''), and ''Sefer HaCheshek''. Abulafia is closely associated with ''
gematria'', the symbolic employment of letters as numerals.
Early life and travels
Very early in life he was taken by his parents to
Tudela, in
Navarre, where his aged father
Samuel Abulafia carefully instructed him in the
Bible and
Talmud. When he was eighteen years old his father died, and two years later Abraham began a life of ceaseless wandering. His first journey was to
Palestine, whence he intended to start and find the legendary river
Sambation and the
lost Ten Tribes. He got no further than
Akko, however, owing to the desolation and lawlessness in the
Holy Land stemming from the chaos following the last
Crusades. He then determined to go to
Rome, but stopped short in
Capua, where he devoted himself with passionate zeal to the study of philosophy and of the ''Moreh'' of
Maimonides, under the tutelage of a philosopher and physician named Hillel — probably the well-known Hillel ben
Samuel ben Eliezer of Verona. Although he always holds Maimonides in the highest estimation, and often makes use of sentences from his writings, he was as little satisfied with his philosophy as with any other branch of knowledge which he acquired. He thirsted after the highest. He was of a communicative disposition, able and eager to teach others. He wrote industriously on kabbalistic, philosophical, and grammatical subjects, and succeeded in surrounding himself with numerous pupils, to whom he imparted much of his own enthusiasm. On his return to
Spain he became subject to
visions, and at the age of thirty-one, at
Barcelona, immersed himself in the study of the ''
Sefer Yetzirah'' and its numerous commentaries. This book, and particularly the commentary and method of the German mystic,
Eleazar of Worms, exercised a deep influence upon him, and had the effect of greatly increasing his mystical bent. Letters of the alphabet, numerals, vowel-points, all became symbols of existence to him, and their combinations and permutations, supplementing and explaining one another, possessed for him an illumining power most effectively to be disclosed in a deeper study of the divine names, and especially of the consonants of the
Tetragrammaton. With such auxiliaries, and with the observance of certain rites and ascetic practises, men, he says, may attain to the highest aim of existence and become
prophets; not in order to work miracles and signs, but to reach the highest degree of perception and be able to penetrate intuitively into the inscrutable nature of the Deity, the riddles of creation, the problems of human life, the purpose of the precepts, and the deeper meaning of the
Torah. His most important disciple, and one who carried his system further, was the cabalist
Joseph Chiquitilla. Abulafia soon left Spain again, and in 1279 wrote at
Patras, in
Greece, the first of his prophetic books, ''Sefer ha-Yashar'' (The Book of the Righteous).
Journey to Rome
In obedience to an inner voice, he went in 1280 to Rome, in order to effect the conversion of
Pope Nicholas III on the day before New Year, 5041. The pope, then in
Suriano, heard of it, and issued orders to
burn the fanatic as soon as he reached that place. Close to the inner gate the stake was erected in preparation; but not in the least disturbed, Abulafia set out for Suriano and reached there August 22. While passing through the outer gate, he heard that the pope had succumbed to an apoplectic
stroke during the preceding night. Returning to Rome, he was thrown into prison by the
Minorites, but was liberated after four weeks' detention. He was next heard of in
Sicily, where he appeared as a prophet and
Messiah.
Decline and exile to Comino
This claim was put an end to by a letter to the people of
Palermo, which most energetically condemned Abulafia's conduct. It was written by Rabbi
Solomon ben Adret, who devoted much of his career to calming the various messianic
hysteriae of the day. Abulafia had to take up the pilgrim's staff anew, and under distressing conditions compiled his ''Sefer ha-Ot'' (The Book of the Sign) on the little island of
Comino, near
Malta, between 1285 and 1288. In 1291 he wrote his last, and perhaps his most intelligible, work, ''Imre Shefer'' (Words of Beauty); after this all trace of him is lost.
Mystical teachings
Abulafia called his kabalistic system "prophetical kabbalah," distinguishing it thus from that of his predecessors, which he considers of lower grade, because it satisfied itself with the characterization of God as
En-Sof ("the Being without end"), with the
Sefirot as vague intermediaries, and with the doctrine of the
transmigration of souls, and because its method remained essentially speculative. Such is only a preliminary and inferior grade of knowledge; the highest goal is prophetism, assuring men a certain degree of community with God. Means hereunto are afforded by the close study of the names of God, particularly of the four-lettered YHWH, and also by gemaṭria, the symbolical employment of letters as numerals. In this the letters of a word are to be considered not only as letters, giving the sound, but as numerals, the sum of which may be replaced by the equal sum of other letters, producing, of course, a new word, which must prove to be identical in significance, or at least allied, with the first word whose sum it equals. Thus Abulafia calls himself sometimes and sometimes [missing Hebrew text?], because the total of the letters in each of these words equals 248, which is likewise the total of the letters in his own given name. In one place, desiring to call himself "Berechiah," he misspells it in order to make it aggregate 248 (
Steinschneider, ''Cat. Munich,'' No. 409). He also employs the processes of ''
notarikon'' (regarding each letter in a word as the initial of some other word, and so making of it an
acrostic), of ''
temurah (substitution of one letter for another), and of ''
ziruf'' (connecting various letters of the same word). He claims to have derived his system of letter-symbols from Moses
Nahmanides; but he probably drew it, especially the gemaṭria and the play with the names of God and the necessary attendant ascetic life and contemplation——from the German mysticism of Eleazar of Worms. His view of prophetism or the prophetic gift as the highest goal seems to indicate the influence of
Judah ha-Levi's ''
Kuzari'' but his idea of the nature of prophecy itself is rather in accord with Maimonides.
Influence
Abulafia's influence upon the further development of the Kabbalah was rather of a retarding than a fostering nature (
Kohler, ''
Jewish Encyclopedia''). He gave it a visionary turn. Owing to his influence there was a growing tendency to juggle with the names of God and
angels, and to employ gematria in its most diverse forms.
Abulafia began his fruitful literary activity in 1271; he himself states the number of his writings to be twenty-six, of which twenty-two are "prophetical." Of these the following have been printed:
★ ''Sefer ha-Ot'' (in the ''Grätz-Jubelschrift,'' Hebrew part, p. 65)
★ ("And this is for Judah"), consisting of a reply to
Solomon ben Adret's attack, in
Adolf Jellinek, ''Auswahl Kabbalistischer Mystik,'' p. 13
★ ''Sheba' Netibot ha-Torah'' (The Seven Ways of the Law), and ''Imre Shefer,'' in Jellinek, ''Philosophie und Kabbala''
★ a part of his autobiography from his ''Ozar Eden Ganuz'' (The Hidden Treasure of Eden), in Jellinek, ''B.H.,'' iii, introduction, p. xl.
Jellinek, in his preface to ''Sefer ha-Ot,'' says "In the Spaniard Abraham Abulafia of the thirteenth century
Essenism of old found its resurrection. Preaching
asceticism and the highest potentiality of the spirit through communion with God, effected by a perfect knowledge and use of His names, he was thoroughly convinced of his prophetic mission, and considered himself to be the God-sent Messiah and Son of God. He differs, however, from the Messiahs who have risen at different times in his many-sided philosophical training as well as in his perfect unselfishness and sincerity. He addresses himself not to the masses, but to the educated and enlightened, and does not confine his mission to his coreligionists, but is filled with the desire to extend it to the adherents of the
Christian church also. It seems that, for the sake of influencing these, he tried to construct a
Trinitarian system, though it was a Trinity in form merely, and did not touch the essence of God's personality. Before his vision stood the ideal of a unity of faith, the realization of which he longed to bring about. Imbued with this spirit, his disciples worked in
Spain and
Italy, emphasizing still more the Trinitarian idea while treating of the 'Ten Sefirot' in order to win the adherents of the Church. Hence the terms Father, Mother, Son, and
Holy Ghost, borrowed from the Christian creed, in the cabalistic literature of the thirteenth century. In order to understand Abulafia psychologically and judge him correctly and without bias in the light of history, it must be borne in mind that his cradle was in Spain, the home of religious ecstasy, and that the age in which he lived was that of the
Crusades, so favorable to mystic speculation, an age in which many longed to see the barriers separating
Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam broken down, and in which the Messianic hopes of the Jews found new nourishment in many hearts."
Jellinek gives a list of Abulafia's works in the introduction to ''Philosophie und Kabbala,'' p. 7; but it needs correction from Steinschneider, ''Catalog,'' 2nd ed., No. 285 et passim, Munich. Abulafia's writings are not wanting in excellent ideas and beautiful illustrations, but these are so overgrown with mystic obscurity and abstruseness that a perusal of them is not very edifying (Kohler et al.,
Jewish Encyclopedia).
Abulafia in popular culture
★ 'Abulafia' is the nickname given by deuteragonist Jacopo Belbo to his
home computer in
Umberto Eco's ''
Foucault's Pendulum''. The machine was used not only for word processing, but also to attempt to extract meaningful snippets from random permutations of text in a fashion reminiscent of Abraham Abulafia's methods.
★ Paul Durham uses the word 'Abulafia' as the escape code to call up a terminal in his virtual reality simulations in
Greg Egan's ''
Permutation City''. This is again a reference to the permutation process, though it is unclear whether it is intended as an homage to the machine in Eco's work or to Abraham Abulafia himself.
★ The young speller Eliza Naumann is introduced to the work of Abulafia by her father in the novel ''
Bee Season'' by
Myla Goldberg, and the
film adaptation (2005) directed by
Scott McGehee and
David Siegel.
★ Science fiction writer
Philip K. Dick claimed at one point to have been possessed by Abulafia's spirit.
Bibliography
★ Kohler, Kaufman ''et al.''. "Abulafia, Abraham." ''
Jewish Encyclopedia.'' 1901-1906; which cites:
★
★
M. H. Landauer, in ''Literaturblatt des Orients,'' 1845, pp. 381 et seq. (this scholar disinterred Abulafia from his long obscurity);
★
★
Adolf Jellinek (who devoted a great deal of study to this author), in the works already mentioned and in his ''Beiträge zur Gesch. der Kabbala,'' pt. ii;
★
★
Moritz Steinschneider, ''Catalog der Hebr. Handschriften der Staatsbibliothek zu München,'' 2nd ed., Nos. 28 et alia, containing references to Hebr. Bibl.;
★
★
Heinrich Grätz, ''Gesch. d. Juden,'' vii.7;
★
★ Bloch, ''Gesch. d. Entwickelung d. Kabbala,'' pp. 46 et seq.;
★
★
Hermann Vogelstein and
Paul Rieger, ''Geschichte der Juden in Rom,'' i.247 et seq. (needs some emendation)
References
★
JewishEncyclopedia.com article
★
Portrait of Abulafia (PDF file)
★
"Circles" - from Life of the World to Come
★
Abraham Abulafia's אור השכל 'Light of the Intellect' - ongoing translation of a major meditation manual by Abulafia
★
See also
★
Christian mythology
★
Jewish mythology