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{{short description|Jew who returns to or adopts Orthodox Judaism}} {{Jews and Judaism sidebar |History}} {{Jewish outreach}} {{italic title}} In [[Judaism]], a '''''ba'al teshuvah''''' ({{langx|he|בעל תשובה}}; for a woman, {{lang|he|בעלת תשובה}}, {{Transliteration|he|ba'alat teshuva}} or {{Transliteration|he|ba'alas teshuva}}; plural, {{lang|he|בעלי תשובה}}, {{Transliteration|he|ba'alei [[teshuva]]}}, 'owner of return [to [[God in Judaism|God]] or his way]') is a Jew who adopts some form of traditional religious observance after having previously followed a [[Jewish secularism|secular]] lifestyle or a less <!-- stringent --> [[frum]] form of Judaism. The '''baal teshuva movement''' is a description of the return of [[Jewish secularism|secular Jews]] to religious Judaism. The term is used to refer to a worldwide [[phenomenon]] among the [[Jew]]ish people.<ref>Dana Evan Kaplan ''Contemporary American Judaism: transformation and renewal'' 2009 "Some found it in a [[havurah]] and later in [[Jewish Renewal]]; others found it in the baal teshuva movement where (hundreds of) thousands of Jews have returned to becoming Torah observant... of Jewish Renewal that is the Baal Teshuvah movement. It is unprecedented in Jewish history. In ed. Mark Avrum Ehrlich ''Encyclopedia of the Jewish diaspora: origins, experiences, and culture: Volume 1'' 2009 Page 627 "It is important to note that although Renewal was fed by the Baal Teshuva movement (new returnees to Judaism) in the late 1960s ... The Baal Teshuva movement was a movement of disenchanted Diaspora and Israeli youth who turned back to ...</ref><ref>Timothy Miller ''America's alternative religions'' 1995 Page 113 "The Baal Teshuva movement addressed these same issues. Men and women attracted to Orthodox Judaism articulated a vision of renewed selfhood. M. Herbert Danzger, studying this phenomenon, commented on the affinity between the ideals of ..."</ref> ==Definition== The phrase ''baal teshuva'' generally refers to a Jew from a non-[[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]] background who becomes religiously observant in an Orthodox fashion; however, the concept can also encompass Orthodox-leaning Jews who become stricter in their observance.<ref name="Moment">{{Cite web|last=Levin|first=Sala|title=Jewish Word: Baal Teshuvah|url=https://momentmag.com/jewish-word-baal-teshuvah/|website=Moment Magazine|date=4 March 2016 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="mjl"/> The term ''baal teshuva'' is from the [[Talmud]] and means "[[Baʿal|master]] of [[Repentance in Judaism|repentance]]".<ref>Lisa Aiken ''The baal teshuva survival guide'' 2009 p1 "Since the baal teshuva movement began in the 1960s, tens of thousands of Jews have become observant. The movement's effects were so noticeable by the 1980s that the New York Times, New York Magazine, the Baltimore Jewish Times, ..."</ref> In Israel, {{Transliteration|he|chozer b'teshuvah}} ({{lang|he|חוזר בתשובה}}; plural: {{Transliteration|he|chozrim b’teshuvah}}), meaning "returning to return" or "returning to repentance" is more commonly used.<ref name="Moment"/><ref name="Tablet">{{cite news|url=https://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-life-and-religion/276399/baal-teshuva-the-next-generation|author=Dana Kessler|title='Baal Teshuvah': The Next Generation|website=[[Tablet (magazine)|Tablet]]|date=11 December 2018}}</ref> Hence, a ''baal teshuva'' is a Jew who transgressed the ''[[halakhah]]'' (Jewish law) knowingly or unknowingly, but has completed a process of introspection to "return" to the full observance of God's ''[[mitzvot]]''.<ref name="mjl">{{cite web|url=https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/baalei-teshuvah/|title=What Is A Ba'al Teshuvah?|website=My Jewish Learning|quote=The phenomenon has inspired a number of scholarly works. Among them, ''Becoming [[Frum]]'', an ethnographic look at how the newly religious learn the language and customs of their new [[Orthodox Judaism|Orthodox]] communities [...]}}</ref> ==Interpretation== According to [[Maimonides]]'s ''[[Mishneh Torah]]'' a ''ba'al teshuvah'' stands higher in ''[[shamayim]]'' (lit. 'heaven') than a "[[frum]] from birth", even higher than a [[tzadik]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/137090/jewish/Tzaddik-The-Baal-Teshuvah.htm|title=Tzaddik — The Baal Teshuvah|author=Rabbi Aaron L. Raskin|website=[[Chabad.org]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.sefaria.org/Mishneh_Torah%2C_Repentance.7?lang=bi|title=Laws of Repentance 7:4, citing Berakot, 34b. C. G.|work=[[Mishneh Torah]]}}</ref> According to the teachings of the [[Torah]], "whoever judges himself will not be judged"; however, in the described history of [[Talmud]]ic times and early [[Hasidism]], many tzadikim were able to "see" the transgressions of others.{{Citation needed | reason="The quotation needs a source listed."|date=June 2022}} {{blockquote|Mar b. R. Ashi said: I am disqualified to judge in a scholar’s lawsuit. What is the reason? Because I love him as much as I love myself, and a person is unable to find fault with himself.<ref>Finkel, Avraham Yaakov. ''Ein Yaakov'' [[Jason Aronson]], Inc (p. 116)</ref>}} {{Teshuva}} ==History== ===In the United States=== The ''baal teshuva'' movement began to appear as an identifiable movement in the United States in the 1960s, as a growing number of young Jews raised in non-religious homes in the United States started to develop a strong interest in becoming a part of observant Judaism; many of these people, in contrast to sociological expectations, became attracted to observant Judaism within Orthodoxy.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} The Baal teshuva movement was also inspired by the [[Counterculture#Sixties and seventies counterculture|sixties and seventies counterculture]], especially the [[counterculture of the 1960s]] and the [[Hippie]] movement (Rabbi [[Shlomo Carlebach (musician)|Shlomo Carlebach]] tried to channel the counterculture and its music into a Jewish direction through his music and teachings<ref>{{cite web |work=Jew of the Day |title=Rabbi Shlomo Charlebach (1925–1994) |url=http://www.jewoftheday.com/categories/culture/Charlebach%20Shlomo.htm}}</ref>), the [[Woodstock Festival]], the [[drug subculture]], the new interest in [[Eastern religion]]s (Rabbi [[Aryeh Kaplan]] tried to channel that interest into a Jewish direction through his writings) and the spirit of youth rebellion that pervaded{{citation needed|date=May 2018}} US high schools and college campuses. It was in recognition of this phenomenon and in response to it that the earliest [[Shaliach#Shluchim or Shlichim today|emissaries]] of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi [[Menachem Mendel Schneerson]], went out to connect with these people and "recruit" them to Judaism. According to Rabbi [[Yosef Blau]] the [[mashgiach ruchani]] of [[Yeshiva University]]: {{blockquote|A baal teshuva movement has emerged with a significant number of Jews from non-traditional homes returning to the observance of grandparents and great grandparents. In fact one of the challenges facing modern Orthodoxy is that many of these returnees are attracted to a European Orthodoxy.<ref>{{cite web |title=American Orthodoxy in the Twenty First Century |work=The Commentator |date=October 26, 2004 |url=http://www.yucommentator.com/2.2843/american-orthodoxy-in-the-twenty-first-century-1.299499 |first=Yosef |last=Blau |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110927145234/http://www.yucommentator.com/2.2843/american-orthodoxy-in-the-twenty-first-century-1.299499 |archive-date=2011-09-27}}</ref>}} Whereas early Baal teshuva trends were partly related to the prevailing anti-establishment atmosphere of the 1960s, an increase in Jewish pride in the wake of Israel's victory in 1967's [[Six-Day War]] fueled and gave momentum to the beginnings of the ''baal teshuva'' movement."<ref>{{cite web|work=Where What When |title=The Miracle of '67: Forty Years Since the Six-Day War |first=Moshe |last=Goldstein |year=2007 |url=http://www.wherewhatwhen.com/read_articles.asp?id=342 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071212195151/http://www.wherewhatwhen.com/read_articles.asp?id=342 |archive-date=December 12, 2007 }}</ref><ref>Aviad, Janet. 1983. ''Return to Judaism: Religious Renewal in Israel''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press</ref> Although the effects of [[the Holocaust]] and the sway of the counterculture movement led many to abandon their religious upbringing, others were willing to experiment with alternate liberated lifestyles, and as part of this experimentation it was intriguing to them to explore Jewish [[Shabbat|Sabbath observance]], intensive [[Jewish services|prayer]], and deeper [[Torah study|Torah]] and [[Talmud]] study. Many of these people adopted a fully Orthodox Jewish way of life, and although some eventually dropped out entirely or found their path within [[Conservative Judaism]] or other streams of Judaism, or even joined other faiths, others chose to remain with Orthodoxy: {{blockquote|... in the 1970s. Orthodoxy began a remarkable revival, spurred on by the missionizing done by the Baal Teshuva movement among other Jews. Lubavitch (also called [[Chabad]]) sent [[Shaliach#Shluchim or Shlichim today|emissaries]] to hundreds of Jewish communities around the country and the world. Among the non-Orthodox, the [[Reform Judaism|Reform]] movement grew, which was due in large measure to the joining of many intermarried couples.<ref name="CambridgeCompanion">{{cite web |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2005 |title=The Cambridge Companion to American Judaism |editor=Dana Evan Kaplan |url=http://72.14.205.104/search?q=cache:_U5lFU9Gk5AJ:www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp%3Fisbn%3D9780521529518%26ss%3Dexc+%22Baal+teshuva+movement%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=30&gl=us }}{{Dead link|date=October 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>}} In 1986, ''[[New York (magazine)|New York]] magazine'' reported: {{blockquote|The people making this sweeping change in their life grew up in a secular world. They went to good colleges and got excellent jobs. They didn't become Orthodox because they were afraid, or because they needed a militaristic set of commands for living their lives. They chose Orthodoxy because it satisfied their need for intellectual stimulation and emotional security.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w-cCAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA54|title=The New Orthodox|first=Cathryn|last=Jakobson|journal=[[New York (magazine)|New York]]|date=November 17, 1986|volume=19|number=45}}</ref>}} ===In the former Soviet Union=== {{unreferenced section|date=June 2013}} The baal teshuva movement also appeared in the former [[Jewish history (Russia and the Soviet Union)|Soviet Union]], which at that time had almost completely secularized its Jewish population. The rise of Jewish pride came in response to the growth of the State of [[Israel]], in reaction to the USSR's pro-[[Arab]] and [[Anti-Zionism|anti-Zionist]] policies, and in reaction to USSR's [[antisemitism]]. The Israeli victory in the Six-Day War in 1967 ignited the pride of Jews in the Soviet Union, particularly in Russia. Suddenly there were hundreds of thousands of Jews wanting to go to Israel, although they dared not express their desire too openly. Several thousand applied for exit visas to Israel and were instantly ostracized by government organizations including the [[KGB]]. Many hundreds became [[Refusenik (Soviet Union)|refuseniks]] (''otkazniks'' in Russian), willing to suffer jail time to demonstrate their new-found longing for [[Zion]]. In the middle of this, there arose a new interest in learning about and practicing Judaism, an urge that the Communist government had long attempted to stamp out. Many Russian Jews began to study any Jewish texts they could lay their hands on. Foreign rabbis, often young students in Chabad Yeshivot, came on visits in order to teach how to learn Torah and how to observe [[Halakha|Jewish law]]. Jewish ritual objects, such as [[tefillin]], [[Mezuzah|mezuzot]], [[siddur]]im, and even [[matzah]], were also smuggled into Russia. With the fall of the Communist regime, there is now a rich resource of Russian religious texts that flourishes and caters to Russian Jews living in Russia, America, and Israel. The return-to-Judaism movement was a spontaneous [[grassroots]] movement from the ground up and was part of the refusenik movement; it came as a great surprise to the Soviet authorities, and even to the Jewish community outside the USSR and it eventually contributed to [[Aliyah#From the Soviet Union and post-Soviet states|Aliyah from the Soviet Union and post-Soviet states]] and the [[History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union#The collapse of the Soviet Union and emigration to Israel|collapse of the Soviet Union and emigration to Israel]]. Young leaders included [[Yosef Mendelevich]], [[Eliyahu Essas]] (who eventually became a [[rabbi]]), [[Herman Branover]], and Yitzchok Kogan, who all later [[Aliyah|moved to Israel]] and are now actively teaching other Russian emigres in Israel, aside from Kogan, who leads a community in Moscow. ===In Israel=== During the 1960s there was a movement among secular Israeli Jews that was essentially a search for spirituality. At the time, most Israeli parents were secular Zionists. While some Jews were hostile to traditional Judaism, a spiritual quest in the 1960s and 1970s caused some Israelis to seek answers in Jewish tradition. Rabbi [[Aharon Feldman]] observes that: {{blockquote|Decades of indoctrination by the secular school systems and the media in Israel have failed to have any effect on the sense of identity which most Jews feel with Judaism—as recent surveys have shown. The masses have become aware of the emptiness—and the terror—of a purposeless, consumerist culture. As a result, among the grassroots levels there is a deep yearning for spiritual values. <u>This yearning has taken on massive proportions as expressed in the baal teshuva movement.</u> The secret is out that Jews believe in God and that they have a Torah.<ref>{{cite web|work=Jerusalem Letter |title=Why the Secular Left Hates Judaism |url=http://www.jerusalemletter.co.il/archives/Feb4,1998/why.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/19981203104335/http://www.jerusalemletter.co.il/archives/Feb4%2C1998/why.htm |archive-date=December 3, 1998 }}</ref>}} In Israel, special schools developed for the newly-religious, who came to be called "Baalei teshuva" (m. plural), "Baal teshuva" (m. singular), a "Baalat teshuva" refers to a female, and "chozeret biteshuva" in [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]]. Schools were established dedicated to the intensive [[Torah study|study of Torah]] specially designed for the newly religious students who wanted to devote time to intensive study of classical texts with the ancient rabbinic commentaries. These schools opened in the early 1970s, mainly based in [[Jerusalem]]. Two significant institutions have been the [[Aish HaTorah]] ("fire of Torah") [[Yeshiva]] headed by Rabbi [[Noach Weinberg]], and the [[Ohr Somayach, Jerusalem|Ohr Somayach]] Yeshiva headed by Rabbis [[Nota Schiller]] and Mendel Weinbach.<ref>{{cite web|publisher=ohr.edu |title=Rabbi Nota Schiller ("credited with being one of the visionary leaders of the Baal teshuva movement") |url=http://ohr.edu/tapes/speaker.php?id=13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040409133704/http://ohr.edu/tapes/speaker.php?id=13 |archive-date=April 9, 2004 }}</ref> Both of these rabbis had degrees from American universities and were able to speak to the modern mind-set. See also [[Diaspora Yeshiva]], [[Machon Meir]]. [[Chabad]] [[Hasidic Judaism|Hasidism]], with many [[Chabad house]]s throughout Israel, and yeshiva programs for Israelis, Russians, French, and Americans, reach out to thousands. Followers of Chabad can be seen attending tefillin booths at the [[Western Wall]] and [[Ben Gurion International Airport]] as well as other public places, and distributing [[Shabbat]] candles on Fridays. There are also Chabad houses in almost every location that Jews might be located, whether as permanent residents, on business, or tourists. Among [[Sephardi Jews|Sephardi]] and [[Mizrahi Jews]], Rabbi [[Amnon Yitzhak]] and Rabbi [[Reuven Elbaz]] are considered the leaders of the baal teshuva movement in Israel.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M8KODwAAQBAJ&pg=PA78|title=Site of Amnesia: The Lost Historical Consciousness of Mizrahi Jewry|first=Yvonne |last=Kozlovsky Golan|publisher=BRILL|year=2019|isbn=9789004395626|page=78}}</ref> ==Challenges, critiques and difficulties== As with all social movements, there is controversy and criticism. Early twenty-first century researchers have debated the "drop-out" rate from this movement and the reasons for it<ref>{{cite book|publisher=Simcha Press |title=New Age Judaism: Ancient Wisdom for the Modern World |first=Melinda |last=Ribner |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qd3Eec6sriIC&q=%22baal+teshuva+movement%22&pg=PA83 |page=83|isbn=9781558747890 |date=April 2000 }} Cites her research that dropping out will occur if the newly-religious do not marry within five years.</ref> and new challenges that are now presented. From a 2005 paper: {{blockquote|Now, many of the younger [[Baby boomer|Baby Boomers]] and [[Generation X]]ers are finding their way back to the [[synagogue]]. Some are spiritually hungry; others are just looking for a place to park the children. Either way, they join congregations in large numbers on the suburban frontier. However, it is not so easy to become religiously involved. Meaningful religious life requires knowledge and learning takes time, something that many young families lack. Most of the parents also lack basic religious skills. The vast majority of [[American Jews]] do not know how to read a [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] [[Siddur|prayer book]], and this makes it difficult for them to participate in an active manner in synagogue ritual. This frustrates them and their egalitarian religious expectations. [[Rabbi]]s reach out to as many different types of people as possible and encourage them to find ways of connecting to the congregation, and, through the synagogue, with [[Names of God in Judaism|God]]. Given the barriers of language, though, it is a difficult challenge.<ref name="CambridgeCompanion"/>}} ==See also== *[[Chabad outreach]] *[[Orthodox Judaism outreach]] *[[Reform Judaism outreach]] *[[Conservative Judaism outreach]] *[[Silent Holocaust (Judaism)|Silent Holocaust]] *[[Jewish fundamentalism]] *[[Tinok shenishba]] ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *[https://books.google.com/books?id=zjfPA1NZFbgC&dq=%22baal+teshuva+movement%22&pg=PR19 Baal teshuva movement noted as part of growth of Orthodoxy (''World of the Yeshiva'' by William Helmreich, p.xix)] *[https://books.google.com/books?id=y3Mt7QlXrRwC&dq=%22baal+teshuva+movement%22&pg=PA113 America's Alternative Religions By Timothy Miller, (academic research about the Baal teshuva movement) p. 113] {{Jewish education}} [[Category:Baalei teshuva| ]] [[Category:Converts to Judaism|*]] [[Category:Hebrew words and phrases]] [[Category:Words and phrases in Modern Hebrew]]
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