Satan in Goray explained

Satan in Goray
Author:Isaac Bashevis Singer
Language:Yiddish
Pub Date:1933
Media Type:Print

Satan in Goray (Yiddish: דער שטן אין גאָריי: אַ מעשה פון פארצייטנס, Yiddish translit.: Der sotn in Goray: a mayse fun fartsaytns; "Satan in Goray: A Tale of the Old Times") is a novel by Isaac Bashevis Singer. It was originally published between January and September 1933 in installments in the Yiddish literary magazine Globus in Poland and in 1935 it was printed as a book. It was Singer's first published novel.[1]

Plot

The novel describes a Jewish life in a Polish village of Goray after the massacres of the Cossack riots during the Khmelnitsky Uprising of 1648, which was influenced by the teachings of the false messiah Sabbatai Zevi in desperate hopes for messiah and redemption. The Jewry is split into two factions: traditionalists and Sabbateans. Eventually the news had come to Goray that Sabbatai Zevi converted to Islam. This was taken in Goray that the way to redemption is to embrace the evil. The strange rites culminate in the possession of one of Sabbatai's prophetesses with dybbuk. Since the Sabbatean's movement waned, a true believer in Torah came and exorcised the dybbuk. The last segment of the novel is stylized as a 17th century document about "the dybbuk of Goray".[2] [3]

Discussion

Ken Frieden asserts that the novel "anticipates Singer’s later fascination with demons".[2] Meyer Levin wrote that the novel is "folk material transmuted into literature" and praised the English translation.[3]

Dar Williams' song "And a God Descended" (from The Green World album) uses imagery from the story to contemplate faith gone awry.

Translations

Notes and References

  1. https://www.makorrishon.co.il/nrg/online/archive/ART/106/117.html בשביס זינגר מזהיר אותנו
  2. [Ken Frieden]
  3. https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/98/01/25/home/singer-satan.html?_r=1&oref=slogin "A False Messiah"
  4. Hugh Denman, Isaac Bashevis Singer: His Work and his World, 2021,, p. 56