Diving Deeper

Hasidism vs. Mitnagdism

The great 18th-century split that still shapes the contemporary Orthodox world.

Diving Deeper  ·  3 minute read

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Summary. Hasidism, founded by the Baal Shem Tov (c. 1698–1760) in Podolia (now Ukraine), is the populist mystical movement that revolutionized Eastern European Jewish life. The Mitnagdim (“opponents”) — led by the Vilna Gaon (1720–1797) — were the Lithuanian Talmudic establishment that opposed Hasidism on grounds of its perceived intellectual looseness, its elevation of the Rebbe to near-Messianic status, and its mystical excesses. The two communities battled fiercely through the 19th century; by the 20th, they had largely reconciled in shared opposition to Reform and assimilation. Both today are pillars of the Haredi world.

The Baal Shem Tov’s Movement

Rabbi Yisrael ben Eliezer, the Baal Shem Tov (“Master of the Good Name,” often the Besht), emerged in the Podolian and Volhynian regions of Eastern Europe in the mid-18th century. His teaching emphasized: dveikut (cleaving to God) over Talmudic erudition as the primary religious goal; joy and ecstatic prayer over solemn intellectual seriousness; the divine spark in every Jew and every thing; the centrality of the Tzaddik (later the Rebbe) as the channel of divine grace to the community. The Besht left no writings; his teachings come down through his disciples — especially his successor Rabbi Dov Ber (the Maggid of Mezeritch) and his great-grandson Rabbi Nachman of Breslov.

The Mitnagdic Response

Rabbi Eliyahu of Vilna, the Vilna Gaon, was the towering Talmudic figure of his generation. He saw Hasidism as a threat to traditional Jewish life: its elevation of the Tzaddik smacked of the false Messianism of Shabbetai Zvi (1626–1676); its prayer practices departed from the standard nusach; its emphasis on dveikut over Talmudic learning threatened the central place of Torah study. In 1772 the Gaon issued a cherem (excommunication) against the Hasidim; further bans followed. The bitter conflict produced informers’ reports to the Tsarist authorities, mutual denunciations, and decades of social rupture.

The Movements that Followed

Hasidism produced an explosion of courts, each centered on a Rebbe and a distinct hashkafa: Belz, Bobov, Breslov, Chabad-Lubavitch, Ger, Karlin-Stolin, Munkacs, Pupa, Satmar, Sanz, Skver, Vizhnitz, and many more. Each has its own customs, melodies, distinctive dress, and ideological emphasis. The Mitnagdic world consolidated around the great Lithuanian yeshivot — Volozhin (founded 1803 by the Gaon’s disciple Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin), Telz, Slabodka, Mir, Brisk — and produced the Lithuanian Mussar movement (see “What is Mussar?”).

The Reconciliation

By the late 19th century, both movements faced the common challenges of the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment), the rise of Reform, and mass Jewish emigration. Common cause against assimilation made the old enmity dissolve. The 20th century’s Holocaust and the founding of the State of Israel further consolidated the two streams into a single Haredi (Ultra-Orthodox) world, though each retains its distinctive ethos, dress, and educational institutions. The Mitnagdic Lithuanian world today is centered on Bnei Brak, Jerusalem (the Mir Yeshiva), and Lakewood, New Jersey; Hasidic centers are in Williamsburg, Borough Park, Crown Heights, Kiryas Joel, Antwerp, London, and the various Hasidic neighborhoods of Jerusalem and Bnei Brak.

Where Denominations Diverge

Hasidism and Mitnagdism are both subsets of Orthodox Judaism. Chabad-Lubavitch (a Hasidic court) has the most extensive outreach to non-observant Jews of any group, with Chabad houses on six continents. The Modern Orthodox movement (Yeshiva University, Bar-Ilan University) is descended primarily from the Mitnagdic tradition and the German neo-Orthodoxy of Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch. Conservative and Reform Judaism developed in 19th-century Germany and are largely separate from this Hasidic/Mitnagdic axis, though Renewal Judaism in particular draws extensively on Hasidic spirituality.

Sources

Baal Shem Tov, Keter Shem Tov (collected teachings).

Shneur Zalman of Liadi, Tanya (foundational Chabad text).

Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon), Commentary on Mishlei and other works.

Chaim of Volozhin, Nefesh HaChaim.

Gershom Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism, ch. 9.

Further Reading

Glenn Dynner, Men of Silk (on the rise of Hasidism in Poland).

Marcin Wodziński, Hasidism: Key Questions.

Allan Nadler, The Faith of the Mithnagdim.