Hasidic Warsaw
Reb Zalmen and the Aleksander Shtibl
Yechiel Hofer author Professor Jonathan Boyarin translator Professor Jonathan Boyarin editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publishing:20th Aug '26
£50.00
This title is due to be published on 20th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A unique depiction - part ethnography, part memoir, part novel - of the Polish Hasidic world on the eve of the First World War.
This book provides the first English translation of Yechiel Hofer’s book, Reb Zalmen. Centering on a particular denizen of the Aleksander Hasidim’s shtibl (prayer house), it offers a unique and intimate portrait of the lives of those who went inside to pray, eat, study, and argue there in the early 20th century. It is hard to imagine that Reb Zalmen was not an actual figure - someone the young Yechiel Hofer actually knew and loved - although finding any trace of him today would be a daunting task. Reb Zalmen was that rare thing, a traditional Jew without a family. His last name is never given; all we are told is that he had originally come to Warsaw from the town of Siedlec.
Regardless of Reb Zalmen’s historical existence, Hasidic Warsaw provides rich material for the ethnography of Polish Hasidism in the early 20th century. It reveals what it was like to experience ‘Gentile’ Warsaw for someone who spends all his time in the Jewish quarter; to confront the new waves of doubt and fashion that threatened the folkways followed there; the rivalries and alliances between different Hasidic courts and their followers; the bitterness of poverty and the struggle to transcend hunger.
Jonathan Boyarin’s introduction orients the reader toward the changing demographic and political situation of Polish Hasidim in the early 20th century. It points to the distinct facets of Warsaw Hasidic life and law that structure the chapters of Hasidic Warsaw, guiding the reader towards their own contemplation of the interplay between fiction and memory.
‘Boyarin’s translation—zesty, entertaining, and eloquent in equal measures—introduces
English readers to a remarkable tale by the noted author Yechiel Hofer. This text, a
must-read for anyone interested in the religious cultures of Jewish Eastern Europe, invites
us to step out of the present and into the thriving, complicated worlds of early twentieth-
century Hasidism.’
‘Hofer’s Hasidic Warsaw is both a fascinating read and a rich historical source. Jonathan
Boyarin brings to us a captivating example of Yiddish literature in his masterful English
translation and a rich historical source on a little-known aspect of the religious life of
Eastern European Jews. Beware! Once you start reading, you might not be able to put it
down!’
ISBN: 9781350517400
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
208 pages