Event Information

Date & Time
Sunday, May 4, 2025
7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
Location Heinz History Center 1212 Smallman Street
Pittsburgh PA, 15222
Ticketing FREE
Register

Join us for the “Kabbalah and the Rupture of Modernity” Book Launch. 

To celebrate the publication of Eli Rubin’s new book, “Kabbalah and the Rupture of Modernity,” the Rauh Jewish History Program & Archives is hosting an evening of local Jewish scholars discussing the work and considering its themes. The program will include short reflections on the book from Shua Hoexter (JGrads Pittsburgh), Leah Shollar (Yeshiva Schools of Pittsburgh), and Adam Shear (University of Pittsburgh), followed by a response from Dr. Rubin.

“Kabbalah and the Rupture of Modernity” provides a comprehensive intellectual and institutional history of Chabad Hasidism through the Kabbalistic concept of ṣimṣum. The onset of modernity, Rubin argues, was heralded by this startling idea: existence itself is predicated on a self-inflicted “rupture” in the infinite assertion of divinity. Centuries of theoretical disputations concerning ṣimṣum ultimately morphed into religious and social schism. These debates confronted the meaning of being and forged the animating ethos of Chabad, the most dynamic movement in modern Judaism.

Chabad’s distinctive character and self-image, Rubin shows, emerged from its spirited defense of Hasidism’s interpretation of ṣimṣum as an act of love leading to rapturous reunion. This interpretation ignited a literal conflagration, complete with book burnings, denunciations, investigations, and arrests. Innovatively integrating history, philosophy, and literature, Rubin shows how Kabbalistic ideas are crucially entangled in the experience of modernity and in the response to its ruptures.

Admission

The program is free with advance registration and will take place in the museum’s sixth floor Detre Library & Archives.

About the Author

Eli Rubin is a contributing editor at Chabad.org. He studied Chassidic literature and Jewish Law at the Rabbinical College of America and at Yeshivot in the UK, the US and Australia, and received his PhD from the Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, University College London. He lives in Pittsburgh.