Among the Jews who, fleeing from the Spanish Inquisition, arrived in Tzfat, were
some of the greatest rabbinical and Kabbalistic scholars of the Middle Ages.
Kabbalah scholars were drawn to Tzfas because of its proximity to Mt. Meron, the
burial place of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai. R' Bar Yochai is believed to have
learned the secrets of Kabbalah while hiding near Tzfas (in Peki'in) from the
Romans. It is said that God appeared to R' Bar Yochai through divine
inspiration, imparting the secrets of the Kabbalah. When the Roman decree
against him was lifted, R' Bar Yochai left his hiding place and began to travel
through the area, teaching what he had received (To Receive is the Hebrew word
"L'Kabel", which is the root of the word "Kabbalah".) Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai is
also believed by religious Jews to have been the author of the Book of Zohar,
the basis of Kabbalah.
It was during the 15th and 16th centuries that
Tzfas became recognized as one of the four holy cities of Israel, the "City of
Kabbalah". (The others being Jerusalem as the home of the Temple, Tiberias as
the city where the Mishna was compiled, and Hebron as the home of the Cave of
Machpelah, resting place of the matriarchs and patriarchs).
After the
Spanish Expulsion, as Jews became more and more dispersed, the Jewish religious
leadership worried that the laws and strictures of Judaism would not be
remembered. To codify Jewish Law, Rabbi Yosef Caro wrote the "Code of Jewish
Law" in Tzfat, in a basement room beneath what is today the "Yosef Caro
synagogue", reportedly together with an angel. Rabbi Alkebetz wrote "Lecha Dodi"
in Tzfat. When Rabbi Yitzhak Luria (the ARI) came to Tzfat, he instituted the
custom of beginning Shabbat with the Kabbalat Shabbat ceremony, singing Lecha
Dodi and other psalms to welcome the Sabbath.
Abbo FamilyOther customs which began in Tzfat and are today part of the established Jewish
World are the custom of staying awake throughout Shavouth night to study Torah
(Tikkun Leil Shavouth) and the Tu B'shevat ceremony. Both of these customs were
derived from Jewish mysticism by the ARI.
In addition, Rabbi Ya'akov
Beirav tried to reinstitute the Sanhedrin in order to reabsorb Jews who had
converted to Christianity under duress during the Inquisition. He was
unsuccessful in his attempt to set up a new Sanhedrin, but he was able to use
the momentum that he started to impress upon the established Jewish World the
obligation to reintegrate the repentant Jews back into Judaism.
Rabbi
Yitzhak Luria, the ARI, was recognized during his lifetime as the greatest
Kabbalah scholar of all times. This reputation stands until today. During the 3
years that he lived in Tzfat he brought new understanding and meanings into the
discipline of Jewish mysticism. He created the "Luranic Kabbalah" that is
mainstream kabbalah study today. This is the discipline of how Kabala can help
us to better our relationship to God and our fellow man. The ARI studied Kabala
in a small cave which sits on the side of the Air Sephardim synagogue (then
called the Eliyahu Hanoi synagogue) and is believed to have studied with Elijah
the Prophet who came to sit with him while the ARI was studying.
child standing in the Abuhav Synagogue, late 19th centuryThroughout the 16th and 17th centuries Tzfat vied with Jerusalem for the
title of "most important city". Among many mainstream rabbis there was
discomfort at Jerusalem having been usurped by Tzfat. The communities of both
cities competed for the privilege of having scholars who came to live in Israel
settle in their communities. When the earthquake of 1759 flattened Tzfat, many
rabbis declared that it was Tzfat' "punishment" for daring to "compete" with
Jerusalem. Whatever the reason, the earthquake was the final stroke that
finished Tzfat's standing as "Golden City", for the Jews of Tzfat were never
able to recover, economically or population-wise. The greatest scholars no
longer flocked to Tzfat, and troubles with local Arab and Druze villages
cemented Tzfat' decline, as did the 1837 earthquake in which close to 4000
residents were killed.