Joel Sirkis

Rabbi Joel ben Samuel Sirkis (Hebrew: רבי יואל בן שמואל סירקיש; born 1561 - March 4, 1640) also known as the Bach (an abbreviation of his magnum opus BAyit CHadash), was a prominent Ashkenazi posek and halakhist, who lived in central Europe and held rabbinical positions in Belz, Brest-Litovsk and Kraków, and is considered to be one of the greatest Talmudic scholars of Poland. He is known for his liberal rulings in his responsum in which he challenges the rabbinic status qua.[1]

Joel Sirkis
Grave of Rabbi Joel Sirkis
TitlehaBach (הב׳׳ח)
Personal
Born
Joel Sirkes

c. 1561
DiedMarch 04, 1640
ReligionJudaism
SpouseBaila Hertzkes
ChildrenEsther Sirkis, Rabbi Samuel Tzvi Hersch Sirkis, Rivka Sirkis, Judab Leib Sirkis, Menachem Sirkis, Wife of Jacob Elhanan, Kalisch Sirkis, Abraham Sirkis, Wife of Yehuda Zell HaLevi
Parents
  • Samuel Sirkis (father)
  • Sarah Jaffe (mother)
Main workBayit Chadash, Teshuvot ha-Bach
BuriedRemah Cemetery
DynastyJaffe

Biography

Born in Lublin, Poland in 1561, his father Rabbi Samuel Sirkis was a rabbi in Lublin and his mother Sarah Jaffe was a member of the Jaffe family, being the daughter of Moses ben Eliezer Jaffe. Making Mordecai Jaffe, the Bach's second cousin.[2] At age fourteen he went to the yeshiva of Rabbi Naftali Zvi Hirsch Schor, a leading student of Rabbi Moses Isserles. After remaining there for some time he went to Brest-Litovsk, where he attended the yeshiva of Rabbi Phoebus. While still a youth he was invited to the rabbinate of Pruzhany, near Slonim. He later occupied the rabbinates of Lukow, Lublin, Medzyboz, Belz, Szydlowka, and Brest-Litovsk, finally settling in Kraków in 1619, where he married Bella Hertzkes and was appointed av bet din and head of the yeshivah. Many of his students became leading rabbis in Poland, the most famous being his son-in-law, David ben Samuel ha-Levi, Gershon Ashkenazi and Menachem Mendel Krochmal. In 1631 he wrote his magnum opus, Bayit Ḥadash (lit "new house"), a critical and comprehensive commentary on the Arba'ah Turim of Jacob ben Asher, in which he traced each law to its Talmudic source and followed its subsequent development through successive generations of interpretation. His work received the approval of the greatest rabbinic scholars of his time, even those outside of Poland. The Bach was also an adherent to Kabbalah, yet he rejected kabbalistic practices that were contrary to the halakhah. He was also critical of those who relied solely on the Shulchan Aruch for halachic decisions, rather than on the Talmud and the Geonim. [1][3][4]

The Bach's responsum provides a concise overview of the social and economic conditions of Polish Jewry, as well as the relationship between Jews and non-Jews in early 17th Poland. One of his responsa, in particular, was censored by the Christian authorities because the work addresses a case of a Jew who was martyred for allegedly stealing a small statue of Jesus. The Polish authorities also demanded the surrender of another Jew accused of receiving the stolen item from the martyr, and threatened to exterminate all the Jews of Kalisz if they refused to surrender the individual. To this, the Bach suggests that the community was permitted to surrender the individual if he was proven to have taken the stolen statue from the martyr. The Bach also discusses cases of apostasy from Judaism, in which he states “It is common knowledge at present that the majority of apostates have converted solely out of their lust for robbery, promiscuity, and consuming forbidden foods in public.” Both his responsum and Bayit Ḥadash display the Bach's liberal attitude towards Judaism and his want to undue religious stringencies, one stating “He who wishes to be stringent, let him be stringent for himself only.” [5]

The Bach allowed the acceptance of emoluments and special privileges by rabbis in return for their services. He extended the permission to sell leavened food to a non-Jew before Passover to include the sale of the room in which such food was found. He permitted the reading of secular, non-Hebrew books on the Sabbath and liberalized certain laws to allow for the greater enjoyment of the festivals. He allowed Jewish physicians to violate the Sabbath when treating non-Jewish patients. He states that he saw no valid reason for the prohibition against listening to a woman's voice in song and permitted church melodies in the synagogue if they were universal in appeal. He excused people sensitive to colds or those lacking warm clothing from the obligation to dwell in booths during Sukkot and permitted women to dress in men’s clothing during extreme weather conditions when this type of attire was more comfortable. [6][7]

Works

References

  1. "Sirkes, Joel | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  2. "Origins of the Joffe Family". www.seligman.org.il. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  3.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "SIRKES, JOEL B. SAMUEL". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. Retrieved Sep 13, 2016.
    Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography:
    • J. M. Zunz, 'Ir ha-Ẓedeḳ, p. 62, Lemberg, 1874;
    • Güdemann, Quellenschriften zur Gesch. des Unterrichts, p. 232, Berlin, 1891;
    • R. N. Rabbinoviez, He'arot we-Tiḳḳunim, p. 9, Lyck, 1875;
    • B. Friedberg, Gesch. der Hebr. Typographie in Krakau, p. 27, Cracow, 1900;
    • idem, Epitaphien von Grabsteinen des Israelitischen Friedhofes zu Krakau, Nebst Biographischen Skizzen, p. 14, Drohobycz, 1897;
    • Ch. N. Dembitzer, Kelilat Yofi, part ii., p. 18b, Cracow, 1893;
    • B. Katz, Le-Ḳorot ha-Yehudim, Berlin, 1899.
  4. "Joel Sirkes (the Bach) (Lublin, Poland)". jewishhistory.org.il. Retrieved Sep 13, 2016.
  5. Schochet, Elijah Judah (2006). Bach : Rabbi Joel Sirkes: His Life, Works and Times. Yashar Books. ISBN 978-1-933143-04-0.
  6. "YIVO | Sirkes, Yo'el". yivoencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
  7. "SIRKES, JOEL B. SAMUEL - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-06-28.
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