Rabbi Yehudah Ashlag's "Introduction to the Zohar"
-- as translated and commented on by Rabbi Yaakov Feldman
_______________________________________________
First off let it be said that R' Ashlag's "Introduction to the Zohar" is an arcane and tightly bound work that's sometimes difficult to comprehend and chock full of allusions to his other works (which are far more fleshed out). So we'll present the text bit by bit here and comment on it based on our reading of those other works, as well as of other Torah sources.
Secondly, this work actually has very little to do with the Zohar per se, though of course it touches on ideas expressed or implied there. So "Introduction to the Zohar" is a misnomer. It's more like an introduction to R' Ashlag's thoughts. It's only given the title it has because it comes at the beginning of R' Ashlag's major work on the Zohar (“Peirush HaSulam”) and because there's other introductory material there. So this work would best be termed "One of Several Introductions to the Rabbi Yehudah Ashlag’s Edition of the Zohar", but that wouldn't do.
The work is comprised of 70 short, pithy chapters; we've taken the liberty of breaking them down into parts to make it easier to take hold of.
(c) 2005 Rabbi Yaakov Feldman
(Feel free to contact me at feldman@torah.org )
-- as translated and commented on by Rabbi Yaakov Feldman
_______________________________________________
First off let it be said that R' Ashlag's "Introduction to the Zohar" is an arcane and tightly bound work that's sometimes difficult to comprehend and chock full of allusions to his other works (which are far more fleshed out). So we'll present the text bit by bit here and comment on it based on our reading of those other works, as well as of other Torah sources.
Secondly, this work actually has very little to do with the Zohar per se, though of course it touches on ideas expressed or implied there. So "Introduction to the Zohar" is a misnomer. It's more like an introduction to R' Ashlag's thoughts. It's only given the title it has because it comes at the beginning of R' Ashlag's major work on the Zohar (“Peirush HaSulam”) and because there's other introductory material there. So this work would best be termed "One of Several Introductions to the Rabbi Yehudah Ashlag’s Edition of the Zohar", but that wouldn't do.
The work is comprised of 70 short, pithy chapters; we've taken the liberty of breaking them down into parts to make it easier to take hold of.
(c) 2005 Rabbi Yaakov Feldman
(Feel free to contact me at feldman@torah.org )
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