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Gershom's Book Shop:
Hasidism Section

(See also the Breslov Hasdism section.)

(For Hasidic videos, go to the Jewish video section)


Teacha! - Stories from a Yeshiva -- a hilarious memoir of a non-Jewish teacher hired to teach second-grade English in a Hasidic Yeshiva in Brooklyn. (He doesn't say which group, but based on clues in the story, I'd guess Satmar.) As the rabbi who hired him said, "Think of it this way, you're going to Mars. " Read my review on Amazon.com

Around Sarah's Table: Ten Hasidic Women Share Their Stories of Life, Faith, and Tradition. I haven't read it yet, but it's getting very good pre-publication reviews. Read more on Amazon.com...


[cover]

Boychiks in the Hood:
Travels in the Hasidic Underground

By Robert Eisenberg. The personal travelogue of a secular, Yiddish-speaking Jewish man who visits a number of modern-day Hasidic communities, some of them in places that will surprise you! Quirky and offbeat, it's a good fun read. Includes chapters on the Breslov pilgrimage to Uman, and a visit to the Hasidic community in Postville, Iowa (the same community as in the Postville book above, but Eisenberg has a different take on it. Read both for balance.)

Click here to order


[cover]

Hasidic Responses to the Holocaust
in the Light of Hasidic Thought

By Pesach Schindler. This book is a pioneering historical study that explores how Hasidim reacted to the Holocaust by drawing on their inner strength of Hasidic teachings about the ultimate goodness of God, the honor and privilege or martyrdom, and the value of sanctifying every moment of life through Torah and mitzvot. This book will help change the common misconception that the Orthodox offered no resistance to the Nazis and "went like sheep to the slaughter." The Hasidim resisted through non-cooperation and refusal to obey Nazi decrees (Did you know there is no record of an Orthodox Jew ever being a capo or overseer?). Hasidim who died in the Holocaust -- many by taking stnds for their faith and refusing to be dehumanized -- were true martyrs, not helpless victims.

Click here to order


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Hasidic Tales of the Holocaust

By Yaffa Eliach. 66 true stories of how Hasidic Jews coped during the Holocaust, and how (most of them) kept their faith. This was the first book of Hasidic reactions to the Holocaust to make it out of the Jewish literary ghetto and into the general public. It's been in print ever since. Chilling and inspiring at the same time, these stories will move your heart.

Order the hardcover ----- Order the paperback


[cover]

Holy Days: The World of A Hasidic Family

By Liz Harris. This book was first published as a series of articles in the New Yorker back in the mid-80's. Although somewhat dated in places, it does allow the reader to view the Hasidic world through the eyes of a non-Hasidic woman reporter who spent time with a Lubovitcher family in Brooklyn. A reader-friendly introduction that explains a lot of the beliefs and daily customs.

Click here to order


Academic studies on Hasidism

[cover] Defenders of the Faith: Inside Ultra-Orthodox Jewry by Samuel Heilman is an ethnographer's journey into the Hasidic and Haredi communities in Israel. The author, while not himself "ultra-orthodox," is a religiously observant Jew trained in anthropology, making him an insider-outsider who is well-qualified to journey into the Jewish sector of Old Jerusalem. His methodology is that of a "participant observer," learning about the culture by doing it with the people. Click here to read a Reb Gershom review and order


Hasidic Williamsburg: A contemporary Study of an American Hasidic Community by William Kranzler, takes you into the Satmar community in NYC, one of the largest but least understood (by the public) Hasidic groups. This book contains a lot of first-person material quoted from the Hasidim themselves, and is especially valuable for possitive chapter on the lives and communal contributions of Hasidic women. Click here to read a Reb Gershom review and order


The Encyclopedia of Hasidism -- This is the first volume of its kind in English to present a comprehensive treatment of the Hasidic movement. Rabbi Rabinowicz, author of numerous books on Hasidism, presents an encyclopedia with hundreds of entries including Hasidic personalities, topics, and important literary works. Click here to order


Legends of the Hasidim by Jerome Mintz. First published back in 1968, reprinted by Jason Aronson, Inc. in 1995. A valuable source book of Hasidic teachings and stories that were collected from the last generation that actually experienced the pre-Holocaust Hasidic culture. Cited on Reb Gershom's FAQ page and in Jewish Tales of Reincarnation. Click here to order


Martin Buber's classic collection, Tales of the Hasidim, is back in print as a quality Schocken paperback, with both volumes in one binding. The translation is a bit antiquated, but it is a good sourcebook for Hasidic stories collected before the Holocauust. Click here to order

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