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Mystical Safed Women
In addition to the numerous great scholars and mystics
associated with Safed, sources testify to some extraordinary female personalities who lived there.
Here is a brief sketch of three of them.  | | " Francesa Sarah...is the only woman known to have possessed a maggid to foretell the future..." |  |  |
The case of Francesa Sarah is unique in the
annals of Jewish history. The revelation of maggidim - angelic spirits -
are known to have been granted only to a select few. For example, such powers
were ascribed to Rabbi Yosef Caro, kabbalist and author of The Code of Jewish
Law. Francesa Sarah, who also lived in Safed in the 16th century, is the only
woman known to have possessed a maggid to foretell the future.
She is mentioned in the Book of Visions by
Rabbi Chaim Vital, (Hebrew title, HaChezyonot, Jerusalem 1954, pp. 10-11)
the Ari's foremost disciple, as well as in a recently published Hebrew chronicle
of the 17th century, which sheds further light on her personality and
activities. [The second title is Sefer Divrei Yosef, by Yosef Sambari,
edited by Shimon Shtober, Jerusalem 1994, pp. 364-366.] In both books, she is
depicted as an extremely wise and righteous woman.
In one instance, she sent for the sages, warning them
that unless they declared a fast day, prayed and gave charity, they would perish
in a plague. The rabbis heeded her, and immediately decreed a fast. When
everyone was gathered on the fast day and one of the rabbis rose to speak, she
received a revelation that he would die in eight days as atonement for the sins
of the congregation. Exactly eight days later, he passed away.
One Safed scholar, although skeptical of her powers,
consulted her as to whether he would succeed in a certain endeavor. Upon
recognizing the veracity of her vision, "he bowed low in homage to G-d, who
imparted of His wisdom to such a woman of valor."
Rabbi Vital notes, however, that while most of her
visions came true, her revelation that the Mashiach would come did not
materialize.
In the past, most of the elderly Jews who immigrated
to the Land of Israel chose to settle in Jerusalem, but one woman who opted for
Safed was the Italian Fioretta of Modena, ancestress to an exemplary
scholar. Her grandson, the scholar, kabbalist, and author Rabbi Aaron Berechiah
of Modena (d.1639), paid tribute to her in the introductions to two of his
books (Seder Ashmoret HaBoker Mechavurat Me'eirei Shachar, Mantua 1624
and Ma'avar Yabbok, Venice 1626.) "May my good name be remembered before
G-d," he wrote, "together with the merit of my mother's mother, the righteous
woman Fioretta...widow of Rabbi Solomon of Modena."  | | " ...it was, therefore, incumbent upon him to give her the respect due a parent and rabbi..." |  |  |
Fioretta absorbed herself in the study of Tanach
(Bible), Oral Law and halachic works, in particular Maimonides, as well as the
Zohar. She adhered to a weekly course of study on each of these subjects which
she herself had charted.
Fioretta raised her grandson, and was responsible for
his education, traveling from city to city in search of the best teachers. Rabbi
Aaron stated that it was, therefore, incumbent upon him to give her the respect
due a parent and rabbi.
Another fascinating woman with a Safed connection is
the legendary "Maiden of Ludomir". Channah Rochel Werbemacher was born in
Ludomir, Poland in 1815 to parents who had been childless for over ten years.
Her father was a follower of the Chassidic master, Reb Mottele of Chernobyl. At
a young age, she displayed an unquenchable thirst for learning, and acquired an
extensive knowledge of Tanach, Aggada and ethical literature.  | | " Crowds flocked to her, seeking out her counsel and blessings..." |  |  |
When she was only nine years old, her mother died.
Once, while visiting her mother's grave, she was struck by a serious illness.
When she finally recovered, she was a transformed person. She began fulfilling
also the commandments that are obligatory only for men, such as tallit
and tefillin, and passed her time in meditation, learning, and prayer.
With the inheritance money she received upon her father's death, she built a
beautiful synagogue.
Crowds flocked to her, seeking out her counsel and
blessings. Out of modesty, she spoke to them from behind a door or a partition.
Like a Chassidic master, she conducted a tish (open table) on Shabbat
afternoons, where she expounded on the Torah.
Later, she immigrated to the Land of Israel, settling
in the Me'ah She'arim quarter of Jerusalem. She walked every morning to the
Western Wall to pray, accompanied by the many who wished to receive her
blessings. On the eve of Simchat Torah, many pilgrims from Hebron, Safed, and
Tiberias frequented her home. Channah Rochel took a constant interest in Jewish
life in Safed, and even left Jerusalem in its favor for a number of years. She
passed away in Jerusalem in 1892. A novel based on her life was recently
published. (They Called Her Rebbe, Gershon Winkler, New York; Judaica Press,
1991)
Visitor Comments: 3
Julia Denton,3/9/2004
What a LOVELY website! What ajudith atkins, from usa, georgia, 4/24/2006
Being Baal Tsehuvah and a wome Eric S. Kingston, from CA, 1/31/2006
A Woman of Valor Makes the Wor
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