Aryeh Kaplan
Template:Short description Template:For Template:Infobox Jewish leader Aryeh Moshe Eliyahu Kaplan (Template:Langx; October 23, 1934 – January 28, 1983)<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Gravesite"/><ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Reader"/> was an American Orthodox rabbi, author, and translator best known for his Living Torah edition of the Torah and extensive Kabbalistic commentaries. He became well-known as a prolific writer and was lauded as an original thinker. His wide-ranging literary output, inclusive of introductory pamphlets on Jewish beliefs, and philosophy written at the request of NCSY are often regarded as significant factors in the growth of the baal teshuva movement.<ref name="Mishpacha Jan 2022">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="tribute"/><ref name="An Appreciation of Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan"/>
Early lifeEdit
Aryeh Kaplan was born in the Bronx, New York City, to Samuel<ref>Shmuel, on monument</ref> and Fannie<ref>Feiga, on monument</ref> (Template:Nee) Kaplan<ref name="US Census 1940"/><ref name="Who's Who"/> of the Sefardi Recanati family from Salonika, Greece.<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Reader"/> His mother died on December 31, 1947, when he was 13, and his two younger sisters, Sandra and Barbara, were sent to a foster home. Kaplan was expelled from public school after acting out, leading him to grow up as a "street kid" in the Bronx.<ref name="Embracing a Street Kid"/>
Kaplan did not grow up religious, and was known as "Len". His family had only a slight connection to Jewish practice, but he was encouraged to say Kaddish for his mother. On his first day at the minyan, Henoch Rosenberg, a 14-year-old Klausenburger Hosid, realized that Len was out of place—he was not wearing tefillin or opening a siddur—and befriended him. Henoch Rosenberg and his siblings taught Kaplan Hebrew, and within a few days, Kaplan was learning Chumash.<ref name="Embracing a Street Kid"/>
When he was 15, Kaplan enrolled at Yeshiva Torah Vodaas, and at age 18 (from January 1953 until June 1953) was among "a small cadre of talmidim" selected to help Rabbi Simcha Wasserman open Yeshiva Ohr Elchonon, a new yeshiva in Los Angeles.<ref name=OhrSom195x>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
After his time in Los Angeles, Kaplan had a few small jobs including teaching at a Hebrew school in the Bronx and at Beth Torah in Richmond, Virginia (February 1955).<ref name="Mason City Globe Gazette February 27, 1965, page 4"/>
In January 1956, Kaplan went to Israel to study at the Mir in Jerusalem. That year, he received semikhah (rabbinic ordination) from some of Israel's foremost poskim, including Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog and Eliezer Yehuda Finkel.<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Semicha from Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda Finkel"/>
Secular careerEdit
Upon returning from Israel in August of 1956, Kaplan became a Hebrew teacher at Eliahu Academy in Louisville, Kentucky.<ref>See this article for the school's history</ref> and beginning in the 1957 fall semester studied at University of Louisville, where he joined Sigma Pi Sigma, the Woodcock Society, and Phi Kappa Phi and eventually completed his bachelor's degree in physics on June 11, 1961.<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Bachelor's degree"/> While in Louisville, he met Tobie Goldstein, whom he married on June 13, 1961, and with whom he had nine children.<ref name="Who's Who"/><ref name="New York Times Obituary"/>
Kaplan then moved to Hyattsville, Maryland, in 1961 to study physics at the University of Maryland and begin his first professional position as a research scientist at the National Bureau of Standards's Fluid Mechanics Division, where he was in charge of magnetohydrodynamics research. Kaplan earned his M.S. degree in physics from University of Maryland in 1963.<ref name="Who's Who"/> After graduating, Kaplan remained at University of Maryland as a National Science Foundation fellow<ref name="NSF 1963 Annual Report"/> through the fall semester of 1964.<ref name="Mason City Globe Gazette April 3, 1965, page 8"/><ref name="Kingsport Times July 22, 1966, page 13"/><ref name="Who's Who"/>
Rabbinic careerEdit
In 1965, Kaplan switched careers and began practicing as a rabbi. In his book Encounters, Kaplan wrote that when asked why he switched from his scientific career to the rabbinate, he said "God had a mission for me".<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan - Encounters page 55"/> His career here divides between pulpit roles initially, and other roles thereafter when based in Brooklyn, New York. Kaplan is mentioned in Igros Moshe: he asked of and received a response from Moshe Feinstein regarding the matter of permitting/enabling a youth minyan to which parents would drive children on Shabbos.<ref>Answer: definitely not, but R'Moshe suggests speaking to youngsters, one at a time/in private, so that those few who walk can have positive influence on the rest. https://kavvanah.blog/2012/01/30/lost-rabbi-aryeh-kaplan-part-ii</ref>
Pulpit rolesEdit
- Adas Israel (1965–1966): On February 19, 1965, Kaplan moved to Mason City, Iowa, where he became the Rabbi of Adas Israel.<ref name="Mason City Globe Gazette February 20, 1965, page 26"/><ref name="Mason City Globe Gazette November 20, 1965, page 5"/> According to a February 1965 article, "Because of his teaching and study since ordination, this is Rabbi Kaplan's first pulpit."<ref name="Mason City Globe Gazette February 27, 1965, page 4"/>
- B'nai Sholom (1966–1967): On August 7, 1966, Kaplan became the Rabbi at B'nai Sholom, a Conservative synagogue<ref name="Encyclopedia of Southern Jewish Communities"/> in Blountville, Tennessee. He held the position through 1967.<ref name="Kingsport Times August 7, 1966, page 21"/><ref name="Congregation B'nai Sholom Records"/>
- Adath Israel (1967–1969): In 1967, Kaplan became the Rabbi at Adath Israel (now known as Adath Shalom), a Conservative synagogue in Dover, New Jersey. He kept this position through 1969.<ref name="Who's Who"/>
- Ohav Shalom (1969–1971): Kaplan then moved to Albany, New York, where he became the Rabbi at Ohav Shalom, a Conservative synagogue.<ref name="H-Net message by Baruch Frydman-Kohl"/> During this time, he also functioned as the president of the AJCC (Albany Jewish Community Center) and the Hillel Counselor to the B'nai B'rith Hillel Counselorship at University at Albany, SUNY.<ref name="Who's Who"/><ref name="JTA Project to Rediscover Jewish Values (July 7, 1970)"/><ref name="JTA SUNYA Refuses to Close School for Passover (April 17, 1970)"/><ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Citation of Service from Hillel"/>
BrooklynEdit
In 1971 Kaplan moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he lived until the end of his life (1983) .<ref name="Who's Who"/> Kaplan did not hold any positions there as a pulpit rabbi, but had many other roles which involved, chiefly, writing and editing religious publications:<ref name="Who's Who"/>
- Chaplain at Hunter and Baruch colleges (New York), from 1971 to 1972
- Associate Editor of "Intercom", of the Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists, from 1972 to 1973
- Editor of Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America's Jewish Life magazine from 1973 to 1974<ref name="JTA: Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan Dead at 48"/>
- Director of publishing at the NCSY from 1974 to 1975.
In the 1970s, Kaplan served in the unofficial capacity of the spiritual advisor for NCSY's Brooklyn region. He would converse with teenagers and answer their questions, whether in his home or at drawn-out NCSY conventions where "Aryeh Kaplan was the last adult standing."<ref name="Mishpacha Jan 2022"/>
He would also deliver lectures at his home in Kensington, which many locals would regularly attend.<ref name="Mishpacha Jan 2022"/>
He also served as the rabbinic consultant for the play "Yentl", after the director met him on the Staten Island Ferry. When asked about his association with a play containing nudity and a woman dressed as a man, Kaplan was quoted to have said "It is an abomination, but so what?"<ref name="Isaac Bashevis Singer: A Life"/>
NCSYEdit
Kaplan was involved with NCSY as an author, speaker, and spiritual mentor.
Pinchas Stolper's wrote in his introduction to The Aryeh Kaplan Anthology how he "discovered" Kaplan:<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Reader"/>
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
I first encountered this extraordinary individual when by chance I spotted his article on "Immortality in the Soul" in "Intercom," the journal of the Association of Orthodox Jewish Scientists, and was taken by his unusual ability to explain a difficult topic - one usually reserved for advanced scholars, a topic almost untouched previously in English - with such simplicity that it could be understood by any intelligent reader. It was clear to me that his special talent could fill a significant void in English Judaica. I always counted as one of my greatest z'chusim (a spiritual merit granted by God) to have had the privilege of "discovering" Rabbi Kaplan. And once we met, we became lifelong friends.
When I invited Rabbi Kaplan to write on the concept of Tefillin for the Orthodox Union's National Conference of Synagogue Youth (NCSY), he completed the 96-page manuscript of God, Man and Tefillin with sources and footnotes from the Talmud, Midrash and Zohar - in less than 2 weeks. The book - masterful, comprehensive, inspiring yet simple - set a pattern which was to characterize all of his succeeding works.{{#if:|{{#if:yes|}}
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BreslovEdit
Kaplan became involved with Breslov through Rabbi Zvi Aryeh Rosenfeld. In 1973, Rabbi Kaplan translated "Rebbe Nachman’s Wisdom", one of Breslov's most important works, into English on Rabbi Zvi Rosenfeld's request.<ref name=mish/> Kaplan also translated and annotated two other books: Until the Mashiach: The Life of Rabbi Nachman, a day-to-day account of Rebbe Nachman's life, and Rabbi Nachman's Tikkun (based on the Tikkun HaKlali).
Kaplan was also involved in preserving Rabbi Nachman of Breslov's grave. In 1979, the government in Uman was planning on demolishing the cemetery containing Rabbi Nachman's grave so they could build housing over it. Rabbis Michel Dorfman and Noson Maimon of Breslov contacted Rabbi Moshe Sherer of Agudath Israel of America, who connected them with Rabbi Pinchas Teitz, who then introduced them to Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan. "Using a manual typewriter, Kaplan put together a presentation there on the spot with maps of Ukraine to show exact longitude and latitude". Rabbi Teitz then sent the presentation to Robert Lipshutz and less than two weeks later after Jimmy Carter met with Leonid Brezhnev at the Strategic Arms Limitation Conference in Vienna, the Soviet ambassador to the U.S. stated that "the Kremlin has decided to honor the plan as originally scheduled, except for Bilinsky Street. That yard will remain untouched." and it was declared an "international shrine."<ref name="Anash: Saving the Kever of Rebbi Nachman"/><ref name="Breslov: 10,000 Jews Spend Rosh Hashana In Uman"/><ref name="Chabad: How the Rebbe Saved Rabbi Nachman’s Tziyun"/><ref name="JPost: When a rabbi's grave became the site of an international incident"/><ref name="VIN: How Jimmy Carter Helped Save Rabbi Nachman’s Tomb From Destruction"/>
Literary outputEdit
Kaplan produced works on topics as varied as prayer, Jewish marriage and meditation. His writing incorporated ideas from across the spectrum of Rabbinic literature, Kabbalah,<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> and Hasidut, all without ignoring science.<ref name=KapSci79>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>"as long as we keep a firm grounding in our seforim ha-kadoshim and our sacred texts, there are really no conflicts."</ref><ref name="Comment from Ari Kahn on Avodah: Volume 14, Number 65"/> The concise and detail-orientated character of his works have been described as reflective of his physicist training.<ref name="week" /> In researching his books, Kaplan once remarked "I use my physics background to analyze and systematize data, very much as a physicist would deal with physical reality."<ref name="series"/>
From 1976 onward, Kaplan worked to translate Me'am Lo'ez (Torah Anthology), which was originally written in Ladino and in time edited for Hebrew (1967). Kaplan was described as working with his typewriter, "the Me’am Loez in Ladino on one side of him and the Hebrew version on the other side, and he'd look from one to the other and back again, comparing and contrasting and typing away furiously the entire time."<ref name="Mishpacha Jan 2022"/> Shortly before his death, he completed The Living Torah, an original translation of the Five Books of Moses and the Haftarot.
Kaplan was described by Rabbi Pinchas Stolper, his original sponsor, as never fearing to speak his mind. "He saw harmony between science and Judaism, where many others saw otherwise. He put forward creative and original ideas and hypotheses, all the time anchoring them in classical works of rabbinic literature."Template:Citation needed
DeathEdit
Kaplan died at his home of a heart attack on January 28, 1983, at the age of 48.<ref name="New York Times Obituary"/> He was buried at the Mount of Olives Jewish Cemetery in Jerusalem.<ref name="Mount of Olives"/>
LegacyEdit
Kaplan's Living Torah was posthumously followed by a work written by others for the rest of the Bible, The Living Nach (published in 3 volumes in the 1990s).
His works continue to be read, and his extensive references are used as a resource.<ref name=KS.JW>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
His works have been translated into Czech, French, Hungarian, Modern Hebrew, Portuguese, Russian, German and Spanish.
In 2021, NCSY republished Kaplan's works.<ref name="NCSY: The Legacy of Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan ztl"/>
The Aryeh Kaplan Academy day school in Louisville, Kentucky, is named in honor of Kaplan.<ref name="Aryeh Kaplan Academy OU community fair 2015"/>
BibliographyEdit
Religious worksEdit
- The Living Torah, Rabbi Kaplan's best-known work, is a translation into English of the Torah, and one of the first to be structured around the parshiyot (the traditional division of the Torah text). It includes maps and diagrams, and incorporated research on realia, flora, fauna, and geography (here, drawing on sources as varied as Josephus, Dio Cassius, Philostratus and Herodotus). The work features frequent footnotes, which also indicate differences in interpretation amongst the commentators, classic and modern.<ref name="Interpretation"/> Rabbi Kaplan called this book his 10th child, since it took him exactly nine months to complete.<ref name="Mishpacha Jan 2022"/> (Moznaim, 1981, Template:ISBN)
- "The Handbook of Jewish Thought," produced early in his career, is a wide-ranging treatment of Judaism's fundamental beliefs<ref name="Ohr Samayach Reading List"/> in two volumes, the first of which was published in Kaplan's lifetime.<ref>This initial volume was retroactively referred to as Volume 1 following the posthumous publication of Volume 2.</ref> A chapter titled "Creation,"<ref>Made available online by Brill, Alan.</ref> in which Rabbi Kaplan "presents evolution as part of the basic tenets of Judaism,"<ref>Brill, Alan in Aryeh Kaplan on Evolution- A Missing Chapter of The Handbook of Jewish Thought (October 2019). In this chapter, annotated by an editor to be of questionable propriety, Rabbi Kaplan argues that "there is overwhelming evidence from astronomy, geology, radioactive dating, and fossils, that this initial creation took place billions of years ago" (first page, 15:5 [see source for citation's endnotes, omitted from above quotation]). He acknowledges that there are those who would reject the scientific evidence, but asserts that it's an "inconceivable" argument that God would mislead mankind in presenting a creation older than its true age (ibid.).</ref> was omitted from publication.<ref>The second volume, posthumously published, references Kaplan's "1967-1969 manuscript that consisted of 40 chapters," 13 of which were "published in 1979 as the Handbook of Jewish Thought;" and that of the remaining chapters (which were clearly "set aside with the thought of eventually preparing them for publication"), only 25 are printed in Volume 2. This "indicates that 2 chapters of the original 40 were suppressed" (Brill, Alan in Aryeh Kaplan on Evolution- A Missing Chapter of The Handbook of Jewish Thought).</ref>
- "Torah Anthology," a 45-volume translation of Me'am Lo'ez from Ladino (Judæo-Spanish) into English. Rabbi Kaplan was the primary translator.
- "Made in Heaven: A Jewish Wedding Guide" (Moznaim, Template:ISBN)
- "Tefillin: God, Man and Tefillin"; "Love Means Reaching Out"; "Maimonides' Principles"; "The Fundamentals of Jewish Faith"; "The Waters of Eden: The Mystery of the Mikvah"; "Jerusalem: Eye of the Universe" — a series of highly popular and influential booklets on aspects of Jewish philosophy and various religious practices. Published by the Orthodox Union/NCSY<ref name="series"/> or as an anthology by Artscroll, 1991, Template:ISBN.
- Five booklets of the Young Israel Intercollegiate Template:Visible anchor — "Belief in God"; "Free Will and the Purpose of Creation"; "The Jew"; "Love and the Commandments"; and "The Structure of Jewish Law" launched his writing career. He was also a frequent contributor to The Jewish Observer. (These articles have been published as a collection: Artscroll, 1986, Template:ISBN)
- Template:Webarchive.
- Sichot HaRan ("Rabbi Nachman's Wisdom"), edited by Rabbi Zvi Aryeh Rosenfeld who had requested Kaplan translate this.<ref name=mish>Template:Cite journal</ref> Kaplan also translated and annotated Until the Mashiach: The Life of Rabbi Nachman, a day-to-day account of Rebbe Nachman's life, for the Breslov Research Institute. In conjunction with Rosenfeld, Kaplan translated and annotated Rabbi Nachman's Tikkun (based on the Tikkun HaKlali).
- Kaplan translated and annotated classic works on Jewish mysticism — Sefer Yetzirah, Bahir, and Derekh Hashem — as well as produced much original work on the subject in English. His Moreh Ohr, a Hebrew-language work, discusses the purpose of Creation, tzimtzum and free will from a kabbalistic point of view.
- "If You Were God," his final work, was published posthumously in 1983. It encourages the reader to ponder topics concerning the nature of being and Divine providence.<ref name="Judaism.com If You Were God"/>
Release datesEdit
Title | Release Date |
---|---|
The Living Torah | June 1, 1981 |
The Handbook of Jewish Thought [Volume 1] | 1979 |
The Handbook of Jewish Thought – Volume 2 | 1992 |
Torah Anthology (Me'am Lo'ez Series) | June 1, 1984 |
Made in Heaven: A Jewish Wedding Guide | June 1, 1983 |
Tefillin | 1975 |
Love Means Reaching Out | 1977 |
The Real Messiah? A Jewish Response to Missionaries | June 1, 1973 |
If You Were God | 1983 |
Meditation and Kabbalah | Jan 15, 1986 |
Jewish Meditation: A Practical Guide | 1985 |
Meditation and the Bible | June 1, 1978 |
Innerspace: Introduction to Kabbalah, Meditation and Prophecy | June 1, 1991 |
Waters of Eden: The Mystery of the Mikvah | 1976 |
Sabbath: Day of Eternity | 1976 |
The Aryeh Kaplan Reader: The Gift He Left Behind : Collected Essays on Jewish Themes from the Noted Writer and Thinker | June 1, 1986 |
Tzitzith: A Thread of Light | 1993 |
Jerusalem, Eye of the Universe | 1976 |
The Infinite Light | 1981 |
Until the Mashiach: The Life of Rabbi Nachman | May 6, 1985 |
The Light Beyond: Adventures in Hassidic Thought | June 1, 1981 |
A Call to the Infinite | Dec 1, 1986 |
Faces and Facets | Jan 1, 1993 |
Rabbi Nachman's Stories | Apr 1, 1985 |
Encounters | Jun 1, 1990 |
Maimonides' Principles | 1984 |
Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation | March 15, 2004 |
The Bahir | September 1, 1990 |
Chasidic Masters | 1991 |
Academic papersEdit
While a graduate student studying physics at the University of Maryland, Rabbi Kaplan published two academic papers:
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Online Living Torah by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan at ort.org Template:Webarchive
- Online Sabbath - Day of Eternity by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan at ou.org
- Collected Writings on aish.com
- Lecture on Jewish Mysticism by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
- "Kabbalah and the Age of the Universe" speech given by Rabbi Kaplan in 1979 (posthumously published online as The Age of the Universe: A Torah True Perspective)
- Gravesite of Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
- Rabbi Dov Meir Eisenstein's sefer 'Morah Or' has a two-page biography