The first chart shows the Baal Shem Tov's close family: his closest relatives, by blood and by marriage. This is meant to clarify the various family relations mentioned in the
Baal Shem Tov's biography.
The second chart shows his descendants to the fourth generation.
The Baal Shem Tov did not found a
Hasidic dynasty proper, as his immediate successor was his student, Rabbi
Dov Ber of Mezeritch, and not any of his descendants. Even so, the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov were revered.[1]
Eventually, some of them founded their own courts and dynasties. Notably, his grandson R.
Baruch of Mezhbuzh established his Hasidic court stressing that he was the sole heir of the Baal Shem Tov, a controversial issue in his time, which eventually distanced him from many of his colleagues, including R.
Shneur Zalman of Liadi and R.
Yaakov Yitzchak of Lublin.[2]
Other descendants became allied by marriage to other powerful Hasidic dynasties (e.g.
Chernobyl,
Karlin-Stolin), producing many dynasties, including some of the dynasties still active today (e.g.
Skver,
Vizhnitz). Thus the family of the Baal Shem Tov can be considered a sort of Hasidic dynasty in its own right, and is often treated as such in reference works on Hasidic dynasties[3] where it is sometimes referred to as the
Mezhbuzh dynasty. (This term is sometimes used specifically for the dynasty of R.
Baruch of Mezhbuzh, see
Mezhbizh (Hasidic dynasty), or for an unrelated dynasty from Mezhbuzh: see
Apta (Hasidic dynasty).)
R. is an abbreviation for the
honorific "
Rabbi". It does not necessarily indicate that the subject was a Rabbi. A rebbe is the spiritual leader of a Hasidic group or community.
R. Yisrael Baal Shem Tov (18 Elul 5458 [25 August 1698] or
c. 1690/1695 – 6 Sivan 5520 [21 May 1760])[4] For more biographical details, see
Baal Shem Tov Married (i) ? (died without issue), (ii) Chana[5]
R. Tsvi Hirsh of
Pinsk (? – 7 Tevet 5540 [16 December 1779]) Married (i) ? (mother of R. Aharon, R. Dov Ber and Sheina Rachel), (ii) Beila (mother of R. Yisrael and Sara Reizel), daughter of R. Shmuel Chosid (i.e. the Pious) of Pinsk. Tsvi Hirsh lived in Mezhibuzh during his father's lifetime, and some time after, until his first wife's death. According to some traditions, he succeeded his father as the leader of united Hasidic Judaism before stepping down in favor of R.
Dov Ber of Mezeritch. Upon marrying Beila, he moved to Pinsk, where he was a rebbe to a small following.[6]
R. Aharon of
Titiov (? – 15 Tevet c.1808/1818), called Reb Orale. Rebbe in
Kostantin, Titiov and
Pavilitsh. Oldest grandson of the Baal Shem Tov.[7]
Sheina Rachel Married R. Yaakov of
Karlin and
Tiberias (? – 21 Kislev 5594 [3 December 1833]), called Reb Yankele Moneles. Son of R. Menachem Mon (Monele) of Karlin, a disciple of R. Dov Ber of Mezeritch and uncle (and foster-father) of
R. Aharon "the Great" of Karlin She took
kvitelech in the manner of a rebbe.[17]
R. Naftali Tsvi Hirsh of Karlin and
Tiberias. Called Reb Hershel dem Baal Shems (R. Hershel, the Baal Shem [Tov]'s [descendant]). Spiritual and secular leader of the Hasidic community (in particular, the
Karlin community) of Tiberias (? – 27 Elul 5624 [28 September 1864]) Married Sara Sosha, daughter of R. Yisrael, the rabbi and rebbe of
Pikov, son of R.
Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. Descendants: the
Boston dynasty[18]
R. Yisroel שותק Shotek i.e. "the Silent" of
Chernobyl, a close associate of R.
Mordechai of
Chernobyl. Died in Yarovitsh near
Homel and was buried there.[19]
Sara Reizel Married R. Moshe Shimon Volf Auerbach (? – 24 Tevet 5597 [1 January 1837]) of
Safed, son of R. Avraham Dov Auerbach, rabbi of
Chmielnik, and grandson of R.
Yaakov Yosef of Polnoe, one of the most prominent disciples of the Baal Shem Tov. Died in the
Galilee earthquake of 1837.[20]
R.
Boruch of Mezhibuzh (c. 1753 – 18 Kislev 5572 [4 December 1811]). Rebbe of
Tultshin and Mezhibuzh. Married (i) ? (daughter of R. Tovia Katskes of
Ostroh), (ii) Sima Chusha, daughter of R. Aharon of Titiov, his cousin (see above). All his children are from his first marriage.[26]
Feiga (? – before c. 1802) Married R. Simcha (c. 1763 – before c. 1802), son of R.
Nachman, rebbe of
Horodenka, a disciple of the Baal Shem Tov.[24]
R.
Nachman of Breslov (1772–1810). Rebbe of
Breslov those paternal ancestry came from (According to Jewish tradition), the
Maharal's family descended
patrilineally from the Babylonian Exilarchs (during the era of the
geonim) and therefore also from the
Davidic dynasty.[27] Married (i) Sosia (mother of his children), (ii) ?, daughter of R. Yehezkel Trachtenberg of
Brody.[28]
R. Yisrael der Toyter (or Hebrew: מת Met) i.e. "The Dead" Married a granddaughter of R. Moshe of
Kitov, an early disciple of the Baal Shem Tov.[28]
^Alfasi, Yitschak, Ha-Ḥozeh mi-Lublin, pp. 14–15, 73–75.
^See Shem u-sheʼerit, ha-Ḥasidut and Even Yisraʼel, which treat it as such.
^Date of birth: The first date has become accepted by the Chabad movement, but it is based on a document from the dubious
Kherson Genizah [
he]. The latter dates are based on other traditions. Even Yisraʼel, p. 62. Date of death: Most traditions. Some have 7 Sivan, or both (with some claiming uncertainty from the onset), but a contemporary source—recently published from manuscript—also has 6 Sivan. ibid., p. 70, "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)".
^Per Shivhe ha-Baʻal Shem Tov. Sources that rely on the Kherson Genizah name her Rachel Lea. Even Yisraʼel, p. 60.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 45–46, 48, 58–59, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". Note that while the assignment Tsvi Hirsh's daughters to their respective mothers is sourced, the assignment of his sons is an educated guess by Even Yisraʼel.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 89, 101–102, 104, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". The date of death is per family tradition, cited by Even Yisraʼel, p. 108. Other versions have 5 Tevet (ibid.), the year is given as c. 1808/1818, since the last living mention of R. Aharon is in 5568 [1808] and the first dead mention in 5578 [1818]. In any case, the commonly cited 5589 [1829] is erroneous (ibid.).
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 110, 113–114, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". His name was not Naftali Tsvi, as written in some sources, but Tsvi (Hirsh) alone, "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (9)".
^Even Yisraʼel, p. 114, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". Note that there is some confusion whether he was R. Aharon's son or grandson. "Keter Shem Tov (1)".
^Even Yisraʼel, p. 81, has him as a grandson of R. Dov Ber of Ulanov, but Shem u-sheʼerit, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", and "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)", all have him as son of R. Dov Ber. See "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (7)" for a clarification of the issue.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 84–85, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)", The Bostoner Rebbetzin Remembers, Appendix.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 58, 83, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)", and "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". In other versions (cited in Shem u-sheʼerit), the epithet "the Silent" is given to a different R. Yisrael: a son of Sima, daughter of R. Dov Ber of Ulanov (see above).
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 59, 85, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". Even Yisraʼel has 5499 [1839], following Shem u-sheʼerit, but the Galilee earthquake was in 1837.
^Sometimes called R. Yechiel Mikhl of
Tulchyn, with the
epithetdos Daytshel ("the German") or its Hebrew equivalent Ashkenazi. All the additions are erroneous. "Vayityaldu" #85.
Brim, M. S., "כתר שם טוב" "Keter Shem Tov" (a family tree of the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov to the fifth generation, in two parts), in היכל הבעש"ט Heichal Habesht23, pp. 164–182, and 24, pp. 157–272. Extended to the sixth and seventh generations in Heichal Habesht26, 29–30.
ISSN1545-8423
Horowitz, Raichel (1996). The Bostoner Rebbetzin remembers. Brooklyn, New York: Mesorah Publications.
ISBN978-0-89906-592-2.
Rabinowicz, Tzvi M. (1996). The Encyclopedia of Hasidism. Northvale, New Jersey: Jason Aronson.
ISBN978-1-56821-123-7.
Vekshtein, N. A., "נהר יוצא ממעזיבוז" "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh", (a ten-part series on the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov, based on the above-mentioned Shem u-sheʼerit, ha-Hasidut mi-dor le-dor, "Keter Shem Tov" and Even Yisraʼel, with comments and additions), in "Vayityaldu" #30–38 and #41.
The first chart shows the Baal Shem Tov's close family: his closest relatives, by blood and by marriage. This is meant to clarify the various family relations mentioned in the
Baal Shem Tov's biography.
The second chart shows his descendants to the fourth generation.
The Baal Shem Tov did not found a
Hasidic dynasty proper, as his immediate successor was his student, Rabbi
Dov Ber of Mezeritch, and not any of his descendants. Even so, the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov were revered.[1]
Eventually, some of them founded their own courts and dynasties. Notably, his grandson R.
Baruch of Mezhbuzh established his Hasidic court stressing that he was the sole heir of the Baal Shem Tov, a controversial issue in his time, which eventually distanced him from many of his colleagues, including R.
Shneur Zalman of Liadi and R.
Yaakov Yitzchak of Lublin.[2]
Other descendants became allied by marriage to other powerful Hasidic dynasties (e.g.
Chernobyl,
Karlin-Stolin), producing many dynasties, including some of the dynasties still active today (e.g.
Skver,
Vizhnitz). Thus the family of the Baal Shem Tov can be considered a sort of Hasidic dynasty in its own right, and is often treated as such in reference works on Hasidic dynasties[3] where it is sometimes referred to as the
Mezhbuzh dynasty. (This term is sometimes used specifically for the dynasty of R.
Baruch of Mezhbuzh, see
Mezhbizh (Hasidic dynasty), or for an unrelated dynasty from Mezhbuzh: see
Apta (Hasidic dynasty).)
R. is an abbreviation for the
honorific "
Rabbi". It does not necessarily indicate that the subject was a Rabbi. A rebbe is the spiritual leader of a Hasidic group or community.
R. Yisrael Baal Shem Tov (18 Elul 5458 [25 August 1698] or
c. 1690/1695 – 6 Sivan 5520 [21 May 1760])[4] For more biographical details, see
Baal Shem Tov Married (i) ? (died without issue), (ii) Chana[5]
R. Tsvi Hirsh of
Pinsk (? – 7 Tevet 5540 [16 December 1779]) Married (i) ? (mother of R. Aharon, R. Dov Ber and Sheina Rachel), (ii) Beila (mother of R. Yisrael and Sara Reizel), daughter of R. Shmuel Chosid (i.e. the Pious) of Pinsk. Tsvi Hirsh lived in Mezhibuzh during his father's lifetime, and some time after, until his first wife's death. According to some traditions, he succeeded his father as the leader of united Hasidic Judaism before stepping down in favor of R.
Dov Ber of Mezeritch. Upon marrying Beila, he moved to Pinsk, where he was a rebbe to a small following.[6]
R. Aharon of
Titiov (? – 15 Tevet c.1808/1818), called Reb Orale. Rebbe in
Kostantin, Titiov and
Pavilitsh. Oldest grandson of the Baal Shem Tov.[7]
Sheina Rachel Married R. Yaakov of
Karlin and
Tiberias (? – 21 Kislev 5594 [3 December 1833]), called Reb Yankele Moneles. Son of R. Menachem Mon (Monele) of Karlin, a disciple of R. Dov Ber of Mezeritch and uncle (and foster-father) of
R. Aharon "the Great" of Karlin She took
kvitelech in the manner of a rebbe.[17]
R. Naftali Tsvi Hirsh of Karlin and
Tiberias. Called Reb Hershel dem Baal Shems (R. Hershel, the Baal Shem [Tov]'s [descendant]). Spiritual and secular leader of the Hasidic community (in particular, the
Karlin community) of Tiberias (? – 27 Elul 5624 [28 September 1864]) Married Sara Sosha, daughter of R. Yisrael, the rabbi and rebbe of
Pikov, son of R.
Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. Descendants: the
Boston dynasty[18]
R. Yisroel שותק Shotek i.e. "the Silent" of
Chernobyl, a close associate of R.
Mordechai of
Chernobyl. Died in Yarovitsh near
Homel and was buried there.[19]
Sara Reizel Married R. Moshe Shimon Volf Auerbach (? – 24 Tevet 5597 [1 January 1837]) of
Safed, son of R. Avraham Dov Auerbach, rabbi of
Chmielnik, and grandson of R.
Yaakov Yosef of Polnoe, one of the most prominent disciples of the Baal Shem Tov. Died in the
Galilee earthquake of 1837.[20]
R.
Boruch of Mezhibuzh (c. 1753 – 18 Kislev 5572 [4 December 1811]). Rebbe of
Tultshin and Mezhibuzh. Married (i) ? (daughter of R. Tovia Katskes of
Ostroh), (ii) Sima Chusha, daughter of R. Aharon of Titiov, his cousin (see above). All his children are from his first marriage.[26]
Feiga (? – before c. 1802) Married R. Simcha (c. 1763 – before c. 1802), son of R.
Nachman, rebbe of
Horodenka, a disciple of the Baal Shem Tov.[24]
R.
Nachman of Breslov (1772–1810). Rebbe of
Breslov those paternal ancestry came from (According to Jewish tradition), the
Maharal's family descended
patrilineally from the Babylonian Exilarchs (during the era of the
geonim) and therefore also from the
Davidic dynasty.[27] Married (i) Sosia (mother of his children), (ii) ?, daughter of R. Yehezkel Trachtenberg of
Brody.[28]
R. Yisrael der Toyter (or Hebrew: מת Met) i.e. "The Dead" Married a granddaughter of R. Moshe of
Kitov, an early disciple of the Baal Shem Tov.[28]
^Alfasi, Yitschak, Ha-Ḥozeh mi-Lublin, pp. 14–15, 73–75.
^See Shem u-sheʼerit, ha-Ḥasidut and Even Yisraʼel, which treat it as such.
^Date of birth: The first date has become accepted by the Chabad movement, but it is based on a document from the dubious
Kherson Genizah [
he]. The latter dates are based on other traditions. Even Yisraʼel, p. 62. Date of death: Most traditions. Some have 7 Sivan, or both (with some claiming uncertainty from the onset), but a contemporary source—recently published from manuscript—also has 6 Sivan. ibid., p. 70, "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)".
^Per Shivhe ha-Baʻal Shem Tov. Sources that rely on the Kherson Genizah name her Rachel Lea. Even Yisraʼel, p. 60.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 45–46, 48, 58–59, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". Note that while the assignment Tsvi Hirsh's daughters to their respective mothers is sourced, the assignment of his sons is an educated guess by Even Yisraʼel.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 89, 101–102, 104, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". The date of death is per family tradition, cited by Even Yisraʼel, p. 108. Other versions have 5 Tevet (ibid.), the year is given as c. 1808/1818, since the last living mention of R. Aharon is in 5568 [1808] and the first dead mention in 5578 [1818]. In any case, the commonly cited 5589 [1829] is erroneous (ibid.).
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 110, 113–114, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". His name was not Naftali Tsvi, as written in some sources, but Tsvi (Hirsh) alone, "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (9)".
^Even Yisraʼel, p. 114, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". Note that there is some confusion whether he was R. Aharon's son or grandson. "Keter Shem Tov (1)".
^Even Yisraʼel, p. 81, has him as a grandson of R. Dov Ber of Ulanov, but Shem u-sheʼerit, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", and "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)", all have him as son of R. Dov Ber. See "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (7)" for a clarification of the issue.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 84–85, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)", The Bostoner Rebbetzin Remembers, Appendix.
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 58, 83, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)", and "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (2)". In other versions (cited in Shem u-sheʼerit), the epithet "the Silent" is given to a different R. Yisrael: a son of Sima, daughter of R. Dov Ber of Ulanov (see above).
^Even Yisraʼel, pp. 59, 85, "Keter Shem Tov (1)", "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh (1)". Even Yisraʼel has 5499 [1839], following Shem u-sheʼerit, but the Galilee earthquake was in 1837.
^Sometimes called R. Yechiel Mikhl of
Tulchyn, with the
epithetdos Daytshel ("the German") or its Hebrew equivalent Ashkenazi. All the additions are erroneous. "Vayityaldu" #85.
Brim, M. S., "כתר שם טוב" "Keter Shem Tov" (a family tree of the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov to the fifth generation, in two parts), in היכל הבעש"ט Heichal Habesht23, pp. 164–182, and 24, pp. 157–272. Extended to the sixth and seventh generations in Heichal Habesht26, 29–30.
ISSN1545-8423
Horowitz, Raichel (1996). The Bostoner Rebbetzin remembers. Brooklyn, New York: Mesorah Publications.
ISBN978-0-89906-592-2.
Rabinowicz, Tzvi M. (1996). The Encyclopedia of Hasidism. Northvale, New Jersey: Jason Aronson.
ISBN978-1-56821-123-7.
Vekshtein, N. A., "נהר יוצא ממעזיבוז" "Nahar Yotzei mi-Mezhibuzh", (a ten-part series on the descendants of the Baal Shem Tov, based on the above-mentioned Shem u-sheʼerit, ha-Hasidut mi-dor le-dor, "Keter Shem Tov" and Even Yisraʼel, with comments and additions), in "Vayityaldu" #30–38 and #41.