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Homepage Kabbalah-Beltser

Kaballah-Beltser yarmulkas (kippah) from Israel.
Please check also our selection of children's Kabbalah-Beltser.

10 items found. Showing items 1 to 10:
 
Lotem kippa

Size XL
ex1005 delicate
 
Price:
 $5.10 
 
Qty. 

Black Xavier

a47l38 
 
Price:
 $10.80 
 
Qty. 

White Rain

a47l39 
 
Price:
 $10.80 
 
Qty. 

Black Rain

a47l37 
 
Price:
 $10.80 
 
Qty. 

Sde Boker

a47l17 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

Bavli

a47l36 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

Mishnah Kabbalah

a47l35 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

White

a47l07 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

Blue-Green

a47l02 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

Firebrick

a47l31 
 
Price:
 $8.80 
 
Qty. 

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What is Kabbalah?

Kabbalah is an aspect of Jewish mysticism. It consists of a large body of speculation on the nature of divinity, the creation, the origin and fate of the soul, and the role of human beings. It consists also of meditative, devotional, mystical and magical practices which were taught only to a select few and for this reason Kabbalah is regarded as an esoteric offshoot of Judaism. Some aspects of Kabbalah have been studied and used by non-Jews for several hundred years.

How old is Kabbalah?

No-one knows. The earliest documents which are generally acknowledged as being Kabbalistic come from the 1st. Century C.E., but there is a suspicion that the Biblical phenomenon of prophecy may have been grounded in a much older oral tradition which was a precursor to the earliest recognisable forms of Kabbalah. Some believe the tradition goes back as far as Melchizedek. There are moderately plausible arguments that Pythagoras received his learning from Hebrew sources. There is a substantial literature of Jewish mysticism dating from the period 100AD - 1000AD which is not strictly Kabbalistic in the modern sense, but which was available as source material to medieval Kabbalists.

On the basis of a detailed examination of texts, and a study of the development of a specialist vocabulary and a distinct body of ideas, Scholem has concluded that the origins of Kabbalah can be traced to 12th. century Provence. The origin of the word "Kabbalah" as a label for a tradition which is definitely recognisable as Kabbalah is attributed to Isaac the Blind (c. 1160-1236 C.E.), who is also credited with being the originator of the idea of sephirothic emanation.

Prior to this (and after) a wide variety of terms were used for those who studied the tradition: "masters of mystery", "men of belief", "masters of knowledge", "those who know", "those who know grace", "children of faith", "children of the king's palace", "those who know wisdom", "those who reap the field", "those who have entered and left".


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