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What I learnt from Rabbi Steinsaltz

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, the world-renown talmudic scholar and author, died in Israel on August 7, aged 83

August 12, 2020 18:38
Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz   credit Steinsaltz.org
2 min read

My first introduction to Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz was through his book The Thirteen Petalled Rose. My father had a well-thumbed paperback edition on his bookcase. I’m not sure what drew me to this esoteric text on Jewish existence and belief. It may have been the intriguing title, or the fact that my father spoke highly of it. I remember trying and failing to understand any of it. And while the kabbalistic concepts he introduced were beyond me, the experience left me with a sense of wonder and hunger for the deep and mysterious world of Jewish mysticism. I was 12 years old at the time. 

Twenty years later, I was on Sabbatical in Jerusalem, working on my PhD. In my spare time I sought out rabbinic and academic figures who I respected from afar. By then I read most of Rabbi Steinsaltz’s writings and had become an ardent fan. 

I had asked around about meeting him but was told that I was reaching too high. He was extraordinarily busy and unlikely to squander his precious time satisfying my curiosity. 

And then it happened. One Friday morning after prayer as I was putting away my tefillin, a friend told me that he could get me 15 minutes with the great man later that afternoon.