Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Alternative spelling of
tzaddik .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word zaddik.
Examples
-
"Reb Mendel is a zaddik, that is to say a holy man, like a saint."
Wednesday the Rabbi Got Wet Kemelman, Harry 1976
-
Although Miriam, the sister of Rabbi Samuel Shmelke of Nikolsburg (1726 – 1778), is mentioned by name and called “the zaddeket,” all anyone wanted of her was that she tell stories about her brother the zaddik.
-
In another instance, the story reveals two completely different relationships that the zaddik has with his two wives.
-
The clever wordplays attributed to her would have made any Talmud student or zaddik proud.
-
Here, too, the woman has no status of her own but exists between the blessing and prophecy of one zaddik and the birth of another.
-
Hasidim streamed to her as they did when her husband, the holy rabbi and zaddik, was alive.
-
The famed female zaddik, the Maid of Ludomir, Hannah Rachel Werbermacher (1805 – 1892), who came to Erez Israel in the second half of the nineteenth century, was one of the more remarkable immigrants.
Old Yishuv: Palestine at the End of the Ottoman Period. 2009
-
The agunot seem to constitute the largest group of women who themselves come to the zaddik to ask for help.
-
Women who ask for the help of a zaddik are usually childless, have difficulty giving birth, seek salvation from the zaddik through their husbands, or are agunot.
-
They are not referred to by name or by any identifying detail, but exist solely in order to convey the power and greatness of the zaddik.
avivamagnolia commented on the word zaddik
~virtuous person
~sometimes spelled "tzadik"
January 18, 2009
avivamagnolia commented on the word zaddik
~virtuous person
~the Zaddik is the charismatic leader in Hasidism, also known as the Rebbe in order to distinguish him from the Rabbi in the conventional sense. This spelling of the word in English is now the usual form but a more correct transliteration would be tzaddik, meaning "righteous man."
January 18, 2009