Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh

Date of Passing: 15-Tammuz. Learn something from his commentary on the Torah, and then make a request. Request whatever you need! Women have become pregnant, sick have been healed!

4 min
Kever of the Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh

Breslev Israel staff

Posted on 04.07.23

Rabbi Arush notes: On the yahrtzeit (date of passing) of Rebbe Chaim ben Attar, the Ohr HaChaim, we have heard incredible stories above nature. Learn something from his commentary on the Torah, and then make a request. Women have gotten pregnant, sick people have been healed. Request whatever you need!
 
 
(Sale, Morocco, 1696 – Israel, 1743) Rabbi Chaim ben Attar, the Rabbi of Sale  spent the majority of his time engrossed in Torah study. His saintly way of life gained him the name Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh (the holy one), and only on a temporary basis engaged in his profession, weaving threads of gold and silver into fancy garments.
 
Once, the governor of Sali, where the Ohr HaChaim lived, was marrying off his daughter. The entire family bought expensive clothing and sent them to the Or HaChaim to weave gold threads into the material. He said to them, “Every month I work enough for my livelihood, and the rest of the time I devote to Torah study. This month I have already earned enough money for my livelihood. Come back next month.” They then told him that the wedding was taking place already that month. 
 
The Ohr HaChaim still refused the job, and returned to his studies. When word got back to the governor about R’ Chaim’s refusal to perform the work for his daughter’s wedding, he was incensed. He immediately ordered that the lions in his courtyard be starved and sent a warning to R’ Chaim that if he doesn’t accept the job at once he will be cast into the lion’s den. He ignored the warning and continued learning.
 
The governor’s men eventually came and took R’ Chaim from his home and threw him into the lion’s den. He sat in the middle of the lions, who formed a circle around him, and sang chapters of Tehillim in a sweet, pleasant voice, as all the lions watched and listened. It was quickly reported to the governor what was happening, and he came to see the amazing miracle with his own two eyes.
 
As soon as he looked into the den, he ordered that R’ Chaim be lifted from the den, and begged the sacred rabbi for forgiveness, entreating him with gifts. Thus, through the great rabbi the verse was fulfilled – “And your fear and intimidation will be cast over all the beasts of the land.” Chazal teach us that anyone within whom the image of God rests in totality instills fear upon the animals, “and no animal overcomes a person unless he appears to the animal as another animal” (Shabbat 151b), that he has lost his “Tzelem Elokim,” image of God.

R’ Chaim’s dream was to go to Israel. After receiving spiritual signs approving his desire, he went on his way. He stopped over in Livorno (Italy),  where he raised large sums of money for publishing his books and establishing a yeshivah in Israel. With 30 followers he arrived in Israel, four days before Rosh HaShanah 5402(1742) and settled in Acco. R’ Chaim and his students spent Yom Kippur in the cave of Elijah the Prophet on Mount Carmel (Haifa), where they all felt a great sense of holiness and witnessed seeing a great Light at the spot where according to tradition Elijah used to pray.
 
The holiday of Purim was spent in Tzfat and Meron, where a great deal of time was spent studying the holy Zohar. They later moved to live in Pki’in for a few months. On the 15th of Elul 5402(1742) R’ Chaim finally arrived in Jerusalem with his group. He immediately  established a yeshivah called ‘Knesset Yisrael‘  and second secretive yeshivah for the study of Kabbalah. One of his new students was Rabbi Chaim Yosef David Azulay (The Chida), who at that time was only 18 years old.
 
R’ Chaim and his students were constantly going on many journeys (zia’rot)  around the land of  Israel visiting grave sites of the tzaddikim. They used the opportunity to pray for the welfare of Jews all over the world, the success of their yeshivah and its financial supporters. 
 
The most famous of Rabbi Chaim’s works is Ohr HaChaim, a commentary on the Torah. In this work he employs the four methods of exegesis: p’shat-explaining the simple meaning; drash-homiletic interpretation; remez-allusion; and sod-the Kabbalistic esoteric approach. This book was enthusiastically accepted by Sephardic and Ashkenazi rabbis alike. 
 
His book Chaffetz Hashem was his first book, it was a commentary on tractates Shabbat, Horayot and Chulin. His second book was Pri Toar, a commentary on Yoreh De’a (one of the sections of Shulchan Aruch). Rishon Letzion was a book he wrote when living in Jerusalem, its a commentary on Prophets and Writings (NACH) and a few tractates of the Talmud.
 
The founder of the Chassidic movement, The Baal Shem Tov, maintained that if he could join forces with Rabbi Chaim, together they could bring the Messiah. The Baal Shem Tov made several failed attempts to reach the Holy Land. In fact the Baal Shem Tov believed that R’ Chaim was the Mashiach of that generation. On the day that R’ Chaim came to Jerusalem, the Baal Shem Tov told his students: “Today Mashiach ben Yosef entered Yerushalayim”.
 
R’ Chaim departed the world at the time of Mincha of Shabbat Pinchas. At that exact moment the Baal Shem Tov was eating the 3rd meal of Shabbat and uttered out: “the Western candle has been extinguished”. After Shabbat he explained: “The tzaddik in the west, R’ Chaim ben Attar, left the world. The proof for that is: there is one secret about the washing of the hands (netilat yadayim) which is revealed to only one person in each generation. This secret was known to R’ Chaim. When I washed my hands for the 3rd meal, that secret was revealed to me, and that was my sign that the “Western candle’ was extinguished.”
 
Rabbi Chaim ben Attar was 47 when he departed the world. He was buried outside the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, on the Mount of Olives. Before the Six Day War in 1967, the Jordanians had control over the cemetery where R’ Chaim was buried. They destroyed many tomb stones and paved a new road. When the tractor touched the grave site of R’ Chaim, it turned upside down and the driver was killed. They tried a second time, and again the tractor turned upside down and the driver was killed. Someone tried to use a hammer, it turned on himself and he was killed too. The grave site was left intact. 
               
Kever of the Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh
 
R’ Chaim had two wives. His first wife Patzonia was unable to bear children for him and encouraged him to marry a second wife. His second wife Esther gave birth to a few daughters. Both of his wives passed away within a few years after R’ Chaim’s death, and were buried next to him.

 

 

Watch this 10 minute clip by Rabbi Cohen about Rabbi Chaim ben Attar. 

Tell us what you think!

1. Breslev Israel Staff (Yehudit)

7/05/2023

Thank you for your feedback, but I’m a bit confused.

Your two corrections are in the article – date of passing (directly below the title) and the daughters born from his second wife Esther (the paragraph between the embedded pic of his kever and the video).

Did you mean something else?

2. IYH

7/04/2023

A few historical corrections:
Ohr Chaim’s yahrzeit is on 15th Tammuz, not 16th of Tammuz
Also, he had children – only daughters but no sons

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