6. He must be exceedingly cheerful, contented, unselfish, benevolent, peaceable, charitable in judging others, courageous, temperate in his dress and mode of living, etc. In every town or village where ten Chasidim are to be found, they must meet separately for prayer and meditation, and use the Spanish form of prayer, introducing into it the Cabalistic elements.
The Chasidim derive their doctrines from the Bible, the Talmud, and more especially from the Sohar. At the death of Baal-Shem, his three grandsons, Bar of Meseritz, Mendel of Przemislan, and Michael of Kolk, continued to govern the sect, which at that time numbered about 40,000 members, and became firmly established in Poland, Wallachia, Moldavia, Gallicia, and Palestine, in all of which countries it still exists, though divided into several parties. Into Hungary it was introduced in 1809, by R. Moses Dattelbaum, one of the ablest men that have thus far belonged to the sect.
The Chasidim have published a number of works in defense of their doctrines. The following are some of them:
1. A small work called
úִּðְéָà
(Tradition), by Senior Salman Lidier, 1780, reprinted in Konigsberg, 1823;
2.
ùִׁòֲøֵé äִéַּçåּã åְäָàîֵåּðָä
(Gates of Love and Truth), by R. Aaron the Levite, Sklow, 1820;
3.
éְùׁåּøåֹú äִðְּäָâåֹú
, a book of ethics, arranged in alphabetical order by R. Nachman, 1821. See Kitto, Cyclopedia, 1:475 sq.; Herzog, Real- Encyklop. 2:637 sq.; Jost, Geschichte des Judenthums und seiner Secten, 3:185 sq.; Ben Chananja, 2:1, 49, 145, 193; Fürst, Bib. Jud. 1:74. SEE ASSIDAEAN.