Tanya

From Powerbase
Revision as of 19:00, 12 June 2026 by David (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Chabad
Rebbes

Shneur Zalman of LiadiDovber SchneuriMenachem Mendel Schneersohn (Tzemach Tzedek)Shmuel SchneersohnShalom Dovber SchneersohnYosef Yitzchak SchneersohnMenachem Mendel Schneerson

Texts

TanyaTorah OrLikutei TorahImrei BinahBasi LeGaniHayom YomIgrot KodeshTorat Hamelekh (The King's Torah)

Institutions

770 Eastern ParkwayChabad.orgAgudas Chasidei ChabadMerkos L'Inyonei ChinuchKehot Publication SocietyJewish Children's MuseumTzivos Hashem

The Americas

Chabad-LubavitchChabad/Lubavitch non profits in the US | Chabad Lubavitch of USA | Chabad Lubavitch of Canada | Chabad Lubavitch of Argentina | Chabad Lubavitch of Brazil | Chabad Lubavitch of Caribbean | Chabad Lubavitch of Mexico | Chabad Lubavitch of Panama | Chabad Lubavitch of Costa Rica | Chabad Lubavitch of Ecuador | Chabad Lubavitch of Guatemala | Chabad Lubavitch of Paraguay | Chabad Lubavitch of Uruguay | Chabad Lubavitch of Chile | Chabad Lubavitch of Peru | Chabad Lubavitch of Venezuela | Chabad Lubavitch of Colombia

In occupied Palestine

Chabad in occupied Palestine | Kfar Chabad | Colel Chabad | Or Simcha Yeshiva | Rabbi Yitzhak Shapira | Yosef Elitzur | Rabbi Meir Ashkenazi | Rabbi Mordechai Shmuel Ashkenazi | Yitzchak Ginsburgh | Od Yosef Chai Yeshiva

In the UK

Chabad Lubavitch in the UK - Chabad-Lubavitch UK | Chabad Lubavitch of Scotland | Chabad-Lubavitch centres in London | Lubavitch in the Midlands | Lubavitch House | Tzivos Hashem UK | Oxford University L'Chaim Society | HabAid | Chabad Lubavitch (Leeds) Limited | Chabad Lubavitch Bricket Wood & Districts | Chabad Lubavitch Brighton | Chabad Lubavitch Centres North East London and Essex Limited

In West Asia and North Africa

Chabad-Lubavitch in West Asia (overview) | Chabad in occupied Palestine | Chabad Lubavitch of Morocco | Chabad Lubavitch of Tunisia | Chabad of United Arab Emirates | Chabad of Istanbul | Chabad in Iran | Chabad in Saudi Arabia | Chabad Lubavitch of Armenia | Chabad Lubavitch of North Cyprus | Chabad Lubavitch of Azerbaijan | Chabad Lubavitch of Georgia

Europe

Chabad Lubavitch of Russia | Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia | Chabad Lubavitch of France | Chabad Lubavitch in the UK | Chabad Lubavitch of Ukraine | Chabad Lubavitch of Germany | Chabad Lubavitch of Italy | Chabad Lubavitch of Netherlands | Chabad Lubavitch of Austria | | Chabad Lubavitch of Kazakhstan | Chabad Lubavitch of Switzerland | Chabad Lubavitch of Belarus | Chabad Lubavitch of Hungary | Chabad Lubavitch of Spain | Chabad Lubavitch of Uzbekistan | Chabad Albania | Chabad Lubavitch of Cyprus | Chabad Lubavitch of Belgium | Chabad Lubavitch of Greece | Chabad Lubavitch of Croatia | Chabad Lubavitch of Bulgaria | Chabad Lubavitch of Finland | Chabad Lubavitch of Iceland | Chabad Lubavitch of Ireland | Chabad Lubavitch of Latvia | Chabad Lubavitch of Luxembourg | Chabad Lubavitch of Malta | Chabad Lubavitch of Moldova | Chabad Lubavitch of Monaco | Chabad Lubavitch of Montenegro | Chabad Lubavitch of Norway | Chabad Lubavitch of Portugal | Chabad Lubavitch of Serbia | | Chabad Lubavitch of Lithuania | Chabad Lubavitch of Poland | Chabad Lubavitch of Romania | Chabad Lubavitch of Slovakia | Chabad Lubavitch of Czech Republic | Chabad Lubavitch of Denmark | Chabad Lubavitch of Estonia | Chabad Lubavitch of Crimea | Chabad Lubavitch of Sweden

Asia and Australia

Chabad Lubavitch of Australia | Chabad Lubavitch of China | Chabad Lubavitch of Thailand | Chabad Lubavitch of India | Chabad Lubavitch of Nepal | Chabad Lubavitch of New Zealand | Chabad Lubavitch of Cambodia | Chabad Lubavitch of Korea | Chabad Lubavitch of Kyrgyzstan | Chabad Lubavitch of Laos | Chabad Lubavitch of Singapore | Chabad Lubavitch of Taiwan | Chabad Lubavitch of New Caledonia | Chabad Lubavitch of Vietnam | Chabad Lubavitch of Japan

In Scotland

The Shul in The Park/Shul in the Park (Scotland) | Chabad of Edinburgh/Chabad Lubavitch of Edinburgh Limited | Lubavitch of Scotland/Friends Of Lubavitch Scotland | L'Chaim's (Giffnock) Ltd/L'Chaim's Kosher Catering Limited/L'Chaim's Restaurant Ltd

In Sub-Saharan Africa

Chabad Lubavitch of Nigeria | Chabad Lubavitch of Angola | Chabad Lubavitch of Congo | Chabad Lubavitch of Ghana | Chabad Lubavitch of Ivory Coast | Chabad Lubavitch of Mauritius | Chabad Lubavitch of Rwanda | Chabad Lubavitch of Uganda | Chabad Lubavitch of South Africa

Outreach

Chabad House | Chabad on Campus | Chabad emissaries | Mitzvah campaigns

Branches

Chabad messianismChabad philosophy

Foundational text of Chabad Hasidism by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, with controversial teachings on Jewish and non-Jewish souls


Template:Infobox book

'The Tanya (Hebrew: תניא, "It has been taught") is the foundational text of Chabad Hasidism, written by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (the Alter Rebbe) and first published in 1796.[1][2]

It serves as a practical spiritual guide, synthesising Kabbalistic concepts into a system for daily Jewish life, emphasising intellectual understanding as the path to emotional devotion.[1]

The work has been praised within Chabad as the "Written Torah of Hasidism" but has drawn criticism for passages distinguishing Jewish and non-Jewish souls, which some interpret as promoting spiritual superiority or racism.[1][3]

History

Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi composed the Tanya over approximately twenty years, completing it around 1796. It was initially titled Likkutei Amarim ("Collected Sayings").[2]

The text circulated among Hasidim before publication and became central to Chabad philosophy.[1]

Structure

The Tanya comprises five sections:

  • Likutei Amarim (Book of the Intermediates): The core section on the Benoni (intermediate person) and the dual souls of Jews.[4]
  • Shaar HaYichud VehaEmuna: On divine unity and faith.[4]
  • Igeret HaTeshuva: On repentance.[4]
  • Igeret HaKodesh: Holy epistles on community and devotion.[4]
  • Kuntres Acharon: Supplementary essays.[4]

Core Concepts

The Tanya addresses the human condition through Hasidic psychology, positing that Jews possess two souls: a divine soul (nefesh elokit) and an animal soul. It guides the Benoni in mastering inner conflict for joyful service of God.[2]

Controversial Elements

A key controversy centres on Chapter 1 of Likutei Amarim, which states that Jewish souls derive from the realm containing holiness, while "the souls of the nations of the world... emanate from the other, unclean kelipot which contain no good whatsoever."[5]

This draws from Lurianic Kabbalah and has been criticised as implying spiritual inferiority or metaphysical racism toward non-Jews.[1][6]

Critics, including some Jewish communities, have called the text racist and objected to its teaching.[7]

Defenders argue the passage refers specifically to historical idolaters, reflects mystical terminology without empirical racism, and that good deeds by non-Jews are acknowledged in other contexts; later Chabad leaders promoted Noahide laws for gentiles.[8][3]

Some modern interpretations, including from Chabad sources, clarify or contextualise the distinction as non-literal or limited.[3]

Reception

The Tanya is revered in Chabad as indispensable for spiritual growth and has seen thousands of editions.[2]

Outside Chabad, reactions vary; some reject its soul dualism and views on non-Jews as incompatible with universal ethics.[1]

See also

External links

Tanya text at Chabad.org

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Wikipedia contributors, Tanya (Judaism) Wikipedia, accessed June 2026.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Chabad.org, Lessons in Tanya Chabad.org, accessed June 2026.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Yitzchak Balk, The Soul of a Jew and the Soul of a Non-Jew Hakirah, accessed June 2026.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Sefaria, Tanya Sefaria, accessed June 2026.
  5. Chabad.org, Chapter 1 Chabad.org, accessed June 2026.
  6. Merrimack Valley Havurah, The Tanya’s view of non-Jewish people Merrimack Valley Havurah, 7 November 2022.
  7. The Jewish Chronicle, reports on Hampstead Garden Suburb Synagogue controversy, 2008.
  8. COLlive, Is the Tanya Really Racist? COLlive, 30 October 2008.