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Yitzhak Kaduri

Yitzhak Kaduri (Hebrew: יצחק כדורי, Arabic: إسحاق كدوري), also spelled Kadouri, Kadourie, Kedourie; "Yitzhak" (c. 1898 – 28 January 2006),[1] was a renowned Mizrahi Haredi rabbi and kabbalist who devoted his life to Torah study and prayer on behalf of the Jewish people. He taught and practiced the kavanot of the Rashash. His blessings and amulets were also widely sought to cure people of illnesses and infertility. In his life, he published no religious articles or books.[2] At the time of his death, estimates of his age ranged from 103 to 108, and his birth year is still disputed.


Yitzhak Kaduri
Personal
Born
Yitzhak Diba

c. 1898
Died28 January 2006
ReligionJudaism
NationalityIsraeli
DenominationSephardic Haredim
OccupationRabbi, kabbalist

His funeral, which was held in Jerusalem drew over half a million followers in what was described as the largest funeral in Israel's history.

Early life

Kaduri was born in Baghdad, which was then part of the Ottoman Empire. His father, Rabbi Kadhuri Diba ben Aziza, was a spice trader. As a youngster, Kaduri excelled in his studies and began learning Kabbalah while still in his teens. He was a child student of Rabbi Yosef Hayyim and studied at the Zilka Yeshivah in Baghdad. He moved to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1923 and there changed his name from Diba to Kaduri.

Student of Kabbalah

He went to study at the Shoshanim LeDavid Yeshiva for kabbalists from Iraq. There he learned from the leading kabbalists of the time, including Rabbi Yehuda Ftaya, author of Beit Lechem Yehudah, and Rabbi Yaakov Chaim Sofer, author of Kaf Hachaim. He later immersed himself in regular Talmudic study and rabbinical law in the Porat Yosef Yeshiva in Jerusalem's Old City, where he also studied Kabbalah with the Rosh Yeshivah, Rabbi Ezra Attiya, Rabbi Saliman Eliyahu (father of Sephardic Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu), and other learned rabbis.

In 1934, Rabbi Kaduri and his family moved to the Old City, where the Porat Yosef Yeshivah gave him an apartment nearby with a job of binding the yeshivah's books and copying over rare manuscripts in the yeshivah's library. The books remained in the yeshivah's library, while the copies of manuscripts were stored in Rabbi Kaduri's personal library. Before binding each book, he would study it intently, committing it to memory. He was reputed to have photographic memory and also mastered the Talmud by heart, including the adjoining Rashi and Tosafot commentaries.[citation needed]

During the period of Arab-Israeli friction that led up to the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the Porat Yosef Yeshivah was virtually turned into a fortress against frequent flashes of violence. When the Jewish quarter of the Old City fell to the invading Jordanian Army, the Jordanians set fire to the yeshivah and all surrounding houses, destroying all the books and manuscripts that Rabbi Kaduri could not smuggle to Beit El Yeshiva (Yeshivat HaMekubalim) in Jerusalem. He knew all the writings of Rabbi Yitzhak Luria, the founder of modern Kabbalah by heart. After the passing of the leading kabbalist, Rabbi Efraim Hakohen, in 1989, the remaining kabbalists appointed Rabbi Kaduri as their head.[citation needed]

Rabbi Kaduri did not publish any of the works that he authored on Kabbalah; he allowed only students of Kabbalah to study them. He did publish some articles criticizing those who engage in "practical Kabbalah", the popular dissemination of advice or amulets, often for a price.[citation needed] Kadouri said "It is forbidden to teach a non-Jew Kabbalah, not even Talmud, not even simple Torah;" perhaps referring to pop celebrity Madonna's publicised interest in Kabbalah; he also said that women (even Jewish) are not allowed to study Kabbalah.[3]

Blessings, amulets and prophecies

Over the years, thousands of people (mainly but not exclusively Sephardi Jews) would come to seek his advice, blessings and amulets which he would create specifically for the individual in need. He had learned the Kabbalistic secrets of the amulets from his teacher, Rabbi Yehuda Fatiyah. Many people directly attributed personal miracles to receiving a blessing from Rabbi Kaduri, such as recovery from severe illnesses and diseases, children born to couples with fertility problems, finding a spouse, and economic blessings.[original research?]

His rise to fame, though, began when his son, Rabbi David Kaduri, who ran a poultry store in the Bukharim Market, decided to found a proper yeshivah organization under his father. Called Nachalat Yitzchak yeshiva, it was located adjacent to the family home in the Bukharim neighbourhood of Jerusalem. His grandson, Yossi Kaduri, took part in this endeavour with him.

Kaduri's followers believed that he was able to predict events. In late 2004, Kaduri said "Great tragedies in the world are foreseen" two weeks before the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami; reporter Baruch Gordon of Arutz Sheva connected the two by saying Kaduri "predicted" the tragedy.[4]

Political involvement

Ahavat Yisrael
אהבת ישראל
 
LeaderYitzhak Kaduri
Founded2003
Dissolved2003
Split fromShas
Merged intoShas
IdeologyZionism
Populism
Social conservatism
Haredi interests
Election symbol
זנ

The last two decades of his life were marred by the controversial way that some would use him to promote various political parties during Israeli elections. Rabbi Kaduri achieved celebrity status during the 1996 Knesset elections when he was flown by helicopter to multiple political rallies in support of the Shas party, and for amulets that were produced in his name for supporters of that party.

In October 1997, Benjamin Netanyahu, then in his first term as Prime Minister of Israel, came to visit Kaduri at his synagogue and was recorded as whispering in his ear "the left has forgotten what it is to be a Jew". This was considered as a divisive action and resonated in the press.[5]

Final days and death

Kaduri lived a life of poverty and simplicity. He ate little, spoke little, and prayed each month at the gravesites of tzaddikim in Israel. His first wife, Rabbanit Sara, died in 1989. He remarried in 1993 to Rabbanit Dorit, a baalat teshuva just over half his age.

In January 2006, Rabbi Kaduri was hospitalized with pneumonia in the Bikur Holim Hospital in Jerusalem. He died at around 10 p.m. January 28, 2006 (29 Tevet 5766). He was alert and lucid until his last day.

An estimated 500,000 people took part in his funeral procession on January 29, which started from the Nachalat Yitzchak Yeshivah and wound its way through the streets of Jerusalem to the Givat Shaul cemetery (also known as Har HaMenuchot) near the entrance to the city of Jerusalem.

Mashiach

 
The note in question, sealed to be opened posthumously

Before his death, Kaduri had said that he expected the Mashiach, the Jewish Messiah, to arrive soon, and that he had met him a year earlier.[6][7] It has been alleged[by whom?] that he left a hand-written note to his followers and they were reportedly instructed to only open the note after Rabbi Kaduri had been dead for one year. After this time period had passed, the note was opened by these followers and was found to read, "ירים העם ויוכיח שדברו ותורתו עומדים‎" (Yarim ha-am veyokhiakh shedvaro vetorato omdim; translated as "he will raise the people and confirm that his word and law are standing"), which, by taking the first letter of each word, reads יהושוע‎, "Yehoshua".[8][9][10] Such acrostics are a well recognised phenomenon in the Tanakh.[11]

Many religious Jews and counter missionaries discredit the note as a Messianic Jewish forgery.

The disciples and son of Rav Kaduri has testified in a video that there was never such a note, and the whole story is a forgery.[12]

Rabbi Tovia Singer suggests that when considering the context of the note, the name Yehoshua may refer to the biblical Yehoshua Ben Nun, rather than to Jesus Christ whose original Hebrew name is the shortened version of Yehoshua—Yeshua. "Yehoshua" in the original Greek Septuagint and New Testament is also directly transliterated as 'Jesus'.[13] Singer also claimed that no member of Kaduri's family he spoke to 'knew anything about this note', but it is Kaduri's disciples who publicized the note and posted it on Kaduri's website.[14]

References

  1. ^ Wagner, Matthew (2006-02-06). "Judaism: The magic of the late Rabbi Yitzhak Kaduri". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 2011-02-12. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  2. ^ . TheGuardian.com. Archived from the original on June 6, 2010. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  3. ^ Associated Press September 10, 2004. "Madonna to visit Israeli rabbis' graves". Retrieved 2015-11-18.
  4. ^ Gordon, Baruch (21 September 2005). "Kabbalist Urges Jews to Israel Ahead of Upcoming Disasters". Arutz Sheva. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
  6. ^ הרב כדורי הלך לעולמו [Rav Kaduri dies] (in Hebrew). nrg Maariv. January 29, 2006. from the original on July 24, 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2014.
  7. ^ "Rabbi Kaduri's Most Recent Words". Arutz Sheva. 2006-01-24. from the original on September 8, 2014. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  8. ^ "A note of Rabbi Kaduri with the name of the messiah". News 1. 2007-01-18. from the original on 2015-02-02. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  9. ^ "The note of Rabbi Kaduri - the messiah: Yehoshua". News First Class. 2007-01-23. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  10. ^ . Rabbi Kaduri's former official website. Archived from the original on 2013-10-17. Retrieved 2013-09-08.
  11. ^ Bullinger, Ethelbert William. . Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2016-03-08.
  12. ^ "The Messianic Lie about Rav Kaduri zt"l disproved". Yad L'Achim. 2013-01-04. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  13. ^ . Breaking Israel News. 2015-06-17. Archived from the original on 2016-07-19. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
  14. ^ "Israel Today | News & Commentary. Stay Informed, Pray Informed". Israel Today.

External links

  Media related to Yitzchak Kaduri at Wikimedia Commons

  • Video of Kaduri visit in summer 2000 to Bet El (in Hebrew)
  • Obituary in the Jerusalem Post

yitzhak, kaduri, hebrew, יצחק, כדורי, arabic, إسحاق, كدوري, also, spelled, kadouri, kadourie, kedourie, yitzhak, 1898, january, 2006, renowned, mizrahi, haredi, rabbi, kabbalist, devoted, life, torah, study, prayer, behalf, jewish, people, taught, practiced, k. Yitzhak Kaduri Hebrew יצחק כדורי Arabic إسحاق كدوري also spelled Kadouri Kadourie Kedourie Yitzhak c 1898 28 January 2006 1 was a renowned Mizrahi Haredi rabbi and kabbalist who devoted his life to Torah study and prayer on behalf of the Jewish people He taught and practiced the kavanot of the Rashash His blessings and amulets were also widely sought to cure people of illnesses and infertility In his life he published no religious articles or books 2 At the time of his death estimates of his age ranged from 103 to 108 and his birth year is still disputed RabbiYitzhak KaduriPersonalBornYitzhak Dibac 1898Baghdad IraqDied28 January 2006Jerusalem IsraelReligionJudaismNationalityIsraeliDenominationSephardic HaredimOccupationRabbi kabbalistHis funeral which was held in Jerusalem drew over half a million followers in what was described as the largest funeral in Israel s history Contents 1 Early life 2 Student of Kabbalah 3 Blessings amulets and prophecies 4 Political involvement 5 Final days and death 6 Mashiach 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditKaduri was born in Baghdad which was then part of the Ottoman Empire His father Rabbi Kadhuri Diba ben Aziza was a spice trader As a youngster Kaduri excelled in his studies and began learning Kabbalah while still in his teens He was a child student of Rabbi Yosef Hayyim and studied at the Zilka Yeshivah in Baghdad He moved to the British Mandate of Palestine in 1923 and there changed his name from Diba to Kaduri Student of Kabbalah EditHe went to study at the Shoshanim LeDavid Yeshiva for kabbalists from Iraq There he learned from the leading kabbalists of the time including Rabbi Yehuda Ftaya author of Beit Lechem Yehudah and Rabbi Yaakov Chaim Sofer author of Kaf Hachaim He later immersed himself in regular Talmudic study and rabbinical law in the Porat Yosef Yeshiva in Jerusalem s Old City where he also studied Kabbalah with the Rosh Yeshivah Rabbi Ezra Attiya Rabbi Saliman Eliyahu father of Sephardic Chief Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu and other learned rabbis In 1934 Rabbi Kaduri and his family moved to the Old City where the Porat Yosef Yeshivah gave him an apartment nearby with a job of binding the yeshivah s books and copying over rare manuscripts in the yeshivah s library The books remained in the yeshivah s library while the copies of manuscripts were stored in Rabbi Kaduri s personal library Before binding each book he would study it intently committing it to memory He was reputed to have photographic memory and also mastered the Talmud by heart including the adjoining Rashi and Tosafot commentaries citation needed During the period of Arab Israeli friction that led up to the 1948 Arab Israeli War the Porat Yosef Yeshivah was virtually turned into a fortress against frequent flashes of violence When the Jewish quarter of the Old City fell to the invading Jordanian Army the Jordanians set fire to the yeshivah and all surrounding houses destroying all the books and manuscripts that Rabbi Kaduri could not smuggle to Beit El Yeshiva Yeshivat HaMekubalim in Jerusalem He knew all the writings of Rabbi Yitzhak Luria the founder of modern Kabbalah by heart After the passing of the leading kabbalist Rabbi Efraim Hakohen in 1989 the remaining kabbalists appointed Rabbi Kaduri as their head citation needed Rabbi Kaduri did not publish any of the works that he authored on Kabbalah he allowed only students of Kabbalah to study them He did publish some articles criticizing those who engage in practical Kabbalah the popular dissemination of advice or amulets often for a price citation needed Kadouri said It is forbidden to teach a non Jew Kabbalah not even Talmud not even simple Torah perhaps referring to pop celebrity Madonna s publicised interest in Kabbalah he also said that women even Jewish are not allowed to study Kabbalah 3 Blessings amulets and prophecies EditOver the years thousands of people mainly but not exclusively Sephardi Jews would come to seek his advice blessings and amulets which he would create specifically for the individual in need He had learned the Kabbalistic secrets of the amulets from his teacher Rabbi Yehuda Fatiyah Many people directly attributed personal miracles to receiving a blessing from Rabbi Kaduri such as recovery from severe illnesses and diseases children born to couples with fertility problems finding a spouse and economic blessings original research His rise to fame though began when his son Rabbi David Kaduri who ran a poultry store in the Bukharim Market decided to found a proper yeshivah organization under his father Called Nachalat Yitzchak yeshiva it was located adjacent to the family home in the Bukharim neighbourhood of Jerusalem His grandson Yossi Kaduri took part in this endeavour with him Kaduri s followers believed that he was able to predict events In late 2004 Kaduri said Great tragedies in the world are foreseen two weeks before the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami reporter Baruch Gordon of Arutz Sheva connected the two by saying Kaduri predicted the tragedy 4 Political involvement EditAhavat Yisrael אהבת ישראל LeaderYitzhak KaduriFounded2003Dissolved2003Split fromShasMerged intoShasIdeologyZionism Populism Social conservatism Haredi interestsElection symbolזנ Politics of IsraelPolitical partiesElectionsThe last two decades of his life were marred by the controversial way that some would use him to promote various political parties during Israeli elections Rabbi Kaduri achieved celebrity status during the 1996 Knesset elections when he was flown by helicopter to multiple political rallies in support of the Shas party and for amulets that were produced in his name for supporters of that party In October 1997 Benjamin Netanyahu then in his first term as Prime Minister of Israel came to visit Kaduri at his synagogue and was recorded as whispering in his ear the left has forgotten what it is to be a Jew This was considered as a divisive action and resonated in the press 5 Final days and death EditKaduri lived a life of poverty and simplicity He ate little spoke little and prayed each month at the gravesites of tzaddikim in Israel His first wife Rabbanit Sara died in 1989 He remarried in 1993 to Rabbanit Dorit a baalat teshuva just over half his age In January 2006 Rabbi Kaduri was hospitalized with pneumonia in the Bikur Holim Hospital in Jerusalem He died at around 10 p m January 28 2006 29 Tevet 5766 He was alert and lucid until his last day An estimated 500 000 people took part in his funeral procession on January 29 which started from the Nachalat Yitzchak Yeshivah and wound its way through the streets of Jerusalem to the Givat Shaul cemetery also known as Har HaMenuchot near the entrance to the city of Jerusalem Funeral procession in the Bucharim neighbourhood of Jerusalem Tombstone of the Rosh HaMekubalim Yitzhak KaduriMashiach Edit The note in question sealed to be opened posthumously Before his death Kaduri had said that he expected the Mashiach the Jewish Messiah to arrive soon and that he had met him a year earlier 6 7 It has been alleged by whom that he left a hand written note to his followers and they were reportedly instructed to only open the note after Rabbi Kaduri had been dead for one year After this time period had passed the note was opened by these followers and was found to read ירים העם ויוכיח שדברו ותורתו עומדים Yarim ha am veyokhiakh shedvaro vetorato omdim translated as he will raise the people and confirm that his word and law are standing which by taking the first letter of each word reads יהושוע Yehoshua 8 9 10 Such acrostics are a well recognised phenomenon in the Tanakh 11 Many religious Jews and counter missionaries discredit the note as a Messianic Jewish forgery The disciples and son of Rav Kaduri has testified in a video that there was never such a note and the whole story is a forgery 12 Rabbi Tovia Singer suggests that when considering the context of the note the name Yehoshua may refer to the biblical Yehoshua Ben Nun rather than to Jesus Christ whose original Hebrew name is the shortened version of Yehoshua Yeshua Yehoshua in the original Greek Septuagint and New Testament is also directly transliterated as Jesus 13 Singer also claimed that no member of Kaduri s family he spoke to knew anything about this note but it is Kaduri s disciples who publicized the note and posted it on Kaduri s website 14 References Edit Wagner Matthew 2006 02 06 Judaism The magic of the late Rabbi Yitzhak Kaduri The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 2011 02 12 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Obituary Rabbi Yitzhak Kaduri World news the Guardian TheGuardian com Archived from the original on June 6 2010 Retrieved May 4 2009 Associated Press September 10 2004 Madonna to visit Israeli rabbis graves Retrieved 2015 11 18 Gordon Baruch 21 September 2005 Kabbalist Urges Jews to Israel Ahead of Upcoming Disasters Arutz Sheva Retrieved August 6 2012 רגעי חסד תקשורתיים פליטות פה של פוליטיקאים פוליטי מדיני הארץ Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved May 16 2009 הרב כדורי הלך לעולמו Rav Kaduri dies in Hebrew nrg Maariv January 29 2006 Archived from the original on July 24 2012 Retrieved September 7 2014 Rabbi Kaduri s Most Recent Words Arutz Sheva 2006 01 24 Archived from the original on September 8 2014 Retrieved August 6 2012 A note of Rabbi Kaduri with the name of the messiah News 1 2007 01 18 Archived from the original on 2015 02 02 Retrieved 2013 09 08 The note of Rabbi Kaduri the messiah Yehoshua News First Class 2007 01 23 Retrieved 2013 09 08 Image of the note of Rabbi Kaduri the messiah Yehoshua Rabbi Kaduri s former official website Archived from the original on 2013 10 17 Retrieved 2013 09 08 Bullinger Ethelbert William The Name of Jehovah in the Book of Esther appendix 60 in Companion Bible Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 03 08 The Messianic Lie about Rav Kaduri zt l disproved Yad L Achim 2013 01 04 Retrieved 7 December 2022 Rabbi Kaduri Jesus as Messiah Claim Proven as False Breaking Israel News 2015 06 17 Archived from the original on 2016 07 19 Retrieved 2 October 2015 Israel Today News amp Commentary Stay Informed Pray Informed Israel Today External links Edit Media related to Yitzchak Kaduri at Wikimedia Commons Video of Kaduri visit in summer 2000 to Bet El in Hebrew Obituary in the Jerusalem Post Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yitzhak Kaduri amp oldid 1129777718, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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