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Pulsa diNura or Pulsa Denoura (Aramaic: פולסא דנורא "lashes of fire") is a kabbalistic ceremony in which God is asked to unleash angels of destruction to block heavenly forgiveness of the subject’s sins, causing all the curses named in the Bible to befall him resulting in his death. However, the Torah prohibits to pray that something bad should happen to someone else. Rather it offers the solution to pray that the bad in the person dies and he becomes a righteous person. Aramaic is a group of Semitic languages with a 3,000-year history. ...
Kabbalah (Hebrew: â, Tiberian: , QabbÄlÄh, Israeli: Kabala) literally means receiving, in the sense of a received tradition, and is sometimes transliterated as Cabala, Kabbala, Qabalah, or other permutations. ...
Tora redirects here. ...
Overview
The origin of this phrase seems to come from the Babylonian Talmud, in tractate Hagigah 15a. This section mentions sixty "pulsey d'nura" (plural) in order to discipline the angel Metatron. A pulsa d'nura is also mentioned once in the Zohar (section 3:263c, Raya Mehemna), one of the classic works of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism). There it is described as a heavenly punishment against a person who does not fulfill their religious obligations. The phrase appears in a small number of other locations in the Talmud and Zohar, but not in the context of a mystical curse. The first page of the Vilna Edition of the Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Berachot, folio 2a The Talmud (Hebrew: ת××××) is a record of rabbinic discussions pertaining to Jewish law, ethics, customs and history. ...
Metatron (Hebrew ×××ר×× or ××××ר××), is the name of an angel in Judaism and some branches of Christianity. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Kabbalah (Hebrew: â, Tiberian: , QabbÄlÄh, Israeli: Kabala) literally means receiving, in the sense of a received tradition, and is sometimes transliterated as Cabala, Kabbala, Qabalah, or other permutations. ...
Some adherents of Kabbalah developed the idea of invoking a curse against a sinner, which they termed pulsa diNura. According to Rabbi Ariel Bar Tzadok, from Yeshivat Benei N'vi'im, in Chicago, Illinois, USA, the popular perception of the pulsa dinura as a curse is mistaken. He writes: This article is about the Jewish educational system. ...
- The Pulsa D’Nora has wrongfully been associated with a certain school of Kabbalah known as Kabbalah Ma'asit (practical). The Pulsa D'Nora is not a magical formula. Torah and Judaism have no connection to or tolerance of magic in any form. Therefore, the consideration of anything in holy Kabbalah, an integral part of [God's] Torah from Sinai to have any ties to magic is a spurious and offensive suggestion. The Pulsa D'Nora is actually not a "curse of death" as many mistakenly believe. No Rabbi or Kabbalist has the right or authority to curse another to death. In accordance to Torah Law, the only way a Jew is put to death is for violation of specific Biblical laws and then only after being tried and condemned by a kosher and authoritative Sanhedrin, the likes of which have not existed in Israel and among the Jewish people since the days of the Temple.
Accusations of the use of this curse by religious Jews against figures whom they find objectionable has been made often over the past 50 years and quoted in mostly Israeli media. As the saying goes in Israel "you have not made it in Israeli politica until you've been cursed by the Pulsa DiNura" Early in the 20th century, agitated Haredi Jews in Jerusalem were accused by the media of having recited the curse against the linguist Eliezer Ben Yehuda. There have been unsubstantiated media reports of the curse being recited against archaeologists and authors. Prior to the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, there have been rumors that the curse had been recited against him by right-wing extremists. Haredi Judaism, also called ultra-Orthodox Judaism, is the most theologically conservative form of Judaism. ...
Hebrew ×ְר×ּשָ××Ö·×Ö´× (Yerushalayim) (Standard) Yerushalayim or Yerushalaim Arabic commonly اÙÙÙÙØ¯Ùس (Al-Quds); officially in Israel Ø£ÙØ±Ø´ÙÙÙ
اÙÙØ¯Ø³ (Urshalim-Al-Quds) Name Meaning Hebrew: (see below), Arabic: The Holiness Government City District Jerusalem Population 724,000 (2006) Jurisdiction 123,000 dunams (123 km²) Jerusalem (Hebrew: , Yerushaláyim or Yerushalaim; Arabic: , al-Quds, the Holiness)[2...
Eliezer Ben-Yehuda (אליעזר בן־יהודה) (b. ...
The Prime Minister of Israel is the elected head of the Israeli government. ...
For other people named Rabin, see Rabin (disambiguation). ...
Avigdor Eskin, a member of the Gush Emunim (bloc of the faithful) claimed to have recited the following maledictions of the Pulsa diNura on the night of October 6, 1995: "Angels of destruction will hit him. He is damned wherever he goes. His soul will instantly leave his body...and he will not survive a month. Dark will be his path and God's angel will chase him. A disaster he has never experienced will beget him and all curses known in the Torah will apply to him. I deliver to you, the angels of wrath and ire, Yitzhak, the son of Rosa Rabin, that you may smother him and the specter of him, and cast him into hed, and dry up his wealth, and plague his thoughts, and scatter his mind that he may be steadily diminished until he reaches his death. Put to death the cursed Yitzhak. May he be damned, damned, damned!" Rabin was assassinated within the month. Avigdor Eskin (born April 26, 1960) is Israeli politician. ...
In July 2005, the Israeli media, without citing sources reported that opponents of the Gaza pullout plan recited the Pulsa diNura in the old cemetery of Rosh Pina, asking the "Angel of Death" to kill Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Six months later Sharon suffered two strokes and is currently in a coma, fighting for his life. Of course, most analysts link this to his age, 77, and obesity. 2005 (MMV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Photos Gaza settlement pullout redirect:Israel unilateral disengagement plan of 2004 ...
Rosh Pina is a town in northern Israel first settled by Romanian Jews in 1882. ...
(Hebrew: , also known by his diminutive Arik ×ָרִ××§) (born February 27, 1928) is a former Israeli politician and general. ...
Reportedly ten rabbis and kabalists, including Yosef Dayan - instigated the same curse several months prior to the assassination of former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin - assembled at the gravesite, which is located near Safed. Rabbi Yosef Dayan was born in 1945 in Mexico to Sephardic Jewish parents from Aleppo, Syria. ...
An article in the religion supplement of the independent ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) weekly Mishpacha recently claimed that there is, in fact, no such thing. The two authors of the article, Dr. Dov Schwartz of Bar-Ilan University and Haredi activist Moshe Blau, spoke at length with three high-ranking kabbalists, and received the answers: "I don't know of it," "I've never heard of any such thing," and "There is no such curse in the Torah." The two writers have made a study of the places in which the term pulsa denura appears in the sources, and have found that it is usually a reference to divine punishment imposed by God on angels, and not a curse or banishment from the community. Among the literal interpretations found for the expression: Ball of fire, whip of fire, burst of fire. The two researchers reached the conclusion that the pulsa denura invoked today is merely a new and particularly frightening version of an excommunication edict, a ceremony that also incorporates extinguishing candles, blowing shofars in synagogue and reciting a curse. Excommunication does not really frighten secular Jews. In the final analysis, what do they care if the Haredim ostracize them? After Israel's establishment, the term pulsa denura replaced excommunication. Excommunication is a religious censure used to deprive or suspend membership in a religious community. ...
A shofar in the Yemenite Jewish style. ...
A synagogue (from Ancient Greek: , transliterated synagogÄ, assembly; Hebrew: â beit knesset, house of assembly; Yiddish: , shul; Ladino: , esnoga) is a Jewish place of religious worship. ...
The researchers did not identify who gave excommunication its new name. But so as not to hold the reader in suspense, we will note that use of the curse in the early days of the state was usually attributed to religious struggles in Jerusalem that involved the leader of the anti-Zionist Neturei Karta movement, Amram Blau. Members of Neturei Karta protesting against Zionism. ...
"Pulsa denura is not a kabbalistic ceremony," they concluded. "Kabbalists do not take part in it, it is not done at midnight but rather at midday - not after a fast of three days, not to the light of black candles, the text is not read seven times, and the persons do not necessarily stand facing the east." It is thought that the Roman Emperor, Titus was cursed after his attack on Masada. He died the year later of mysterious circumstances. In any event, the writers seemed to have a good time making fun of the secular, who "although they do not believe in the Creator of the World or his Torah, believe - and how - in pulsa denura." On November 7, 2006 the HaEdah HaCharedis said it was considering placing the curse on the organisers of the gay pride parade scheduled to march in Jerusalem on November 10, 2006. Israel Army Radio interviewed Rabbi Shmuel Papenheim who announced, “The Rabbinical Court has held a special session and discussed placing a ‘pulsa denura’ on those who have had a hand in organizing the march.” Papenheim, editor of the haredi religious umbrella organization’s weekly magazine, added that the rabbis were also considering placing the curse “against the policemen who beat hareidi Jews.” [1] The Edah HaCharedis (Hebrew: ××¢×× ××ר××ת HaEdah HaCharedis), also written Edah Haredit, is a prominent Haredi rabbinical body in present-day Jerusalem. ...
Israel Army Radio, or Galèi Tzáhal as it is called in Hebrew (××× ×¦××, lit. ...
Haredi or Charedi Judaism (alternatively Hareidi or Chareidi - this spelling being usually preferred by Haredim themselves) is the most theologically conservative form of Orthodox Judaism. ...
See also Cherem (or Herem ×ר×), is the highest ecclesiastical censure in the Jewish community. ...
The Unforgivable Curses are some of the most powerful Dark Arts spells known in the world of Harry Potter. ...
Folklore is the body of expressive culture, including tales, music, dance, legends, oral history, proverbs, jokes, popular beliefs, customs, material culture, and so forth within a particular population comprising the traditions (including oral traditions) of that culture, subculture, or group. ...
An urban legend or urban myth is a kind of modern folklore consisting of stories often thought to be factual by those circulating them. ...
External links - Statement by Rabbi Ariel Bar Tzadok, from Yeshivat Benei N'vi'im (PDF)
- Description of the Action
- The Sharon Death Curse article in the February 2006 issue of the Fortean Times [FT206:55]
Fortean Times is a British monthly magazine devoted to the anomalous phenomena popularised by Charles Fort. ...
References - ^ Eida Haredit Rabbinical Counsel Considers Curse on Parade Organizers, Israel National News, November 7, 2006.
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