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Glossary›Tzaddik

Glossary

Tzaddik

A righteous person in Judaism; in Hasidic tradition, a spiritual leader who channels divine blessing to the community.

What is Tzaddik?

Tzaddik (Hebrew: צַדִּיק, tsaddiq, plural tzadikim) is a title in Judaism given to people considered righteous, such as biblical figures and later spiritual masters. The root of the word ṣadiq is צ־ד־ק (ṣ-d-q), which relates to justice or righteousness. Tzaddik derives from the Hebrew verb צדק (TzDK), which carries the meaning of doing what is correct and just—tzedek is making everything the way it should be.

The term operates on multiple levels. In its plainest usage, a tzaddik is someone whose conduct is straight, whose merits outweigh sins, who pursues justice. In the Bible, a tzaddiq is a just or righteous person who, if a ruler, rules justly and takes joy in justice. Seven biblical tzadikim—Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, Aaron, Joseph, and David—are considered embodiments of the emotional sephirot, with Joseph and Moses identified as archetypes for the Tzadik.

The term developed in rabbinic thought from its Talmudic contrast with hasid (pious), to its exploration in ethical literature, and its esoteric spiritualization in Kabbalah. Since the late 17th century, in Hasidic Judaism, the institution of the mystical tzadik as a divine channel assumed central importance. According to Shneur Zalman of Liadi’s Tanya, the true title of tzadik denotes one who has completely sublimated their natural soul inclinations into holiness, experiencing only love and awe of God without material temptations—hence, a tzadik serves as a vehicle (merkavah) to God with no ego or self-consciousness.

The Talmud asserts that at least 36 Tzadikim Nistarim (anonymous tzadikim) are living among us in all times. Hasidim adhere to the belief that there is a person born each generation with the potential to become Messiah—this candidate is known as the Tzadik Ha-Dor, the Tzaddik of the Generation.

Origins & Lineage

The first person explicitly called a tzadik in scripture is Noah, described in Genesis 6:9 as “a just man and perfect in his generations” who “walked with God.” The concept threads through prophetic literature—Proverbs 10:6 states “Blessings are upon the head of the righteous,” and Deuteronomy 16:20 commands “Tzedek, tzedek tirdof”—“Justice, justice you shall pursue.”

The mystical elaboration of the tzaddik emerged through medieval Kabbalah, particularly in the Zohar (13th century Spain), which proclaimed “tzaddik yesod olam”—the righteous one is the foundation of the world. In Kabbalah, Joseph embodies the sefirah of Yesod, the channel connecting higher spirituality to material reality—the social role of the tzadik in Hasidic Judaism.

Israel ben Eliezer (c. 1700–1760), known as the Baal Shem Tov or Besht, is regarded as the founder of Hasidic Judaism; a central tenet associated with him is devekut, direct connection with the divine infused in every human activity. In 1740, the Besht moved to Mezhibush, where scholars including Jacob Joseph of Polonnoye, Pinchas of Koritz, and Dovber (later his successor) studied with him; these students would become conduits transmitting chassidic thought to European Jewry after his death. Since the late 17th century, Hasidic Judaism elevated the mystical tzadik as divine channel to central importance, combining popularization of Jewish mysticism with social movement, emphasizing devekut attachment to rebbe leadership who embody and channel divine blessing.

How It’s Practiced

In early Hasidic writings, the tzaddik is the channel through which divine grace flows to bring blessings to followers; the prayers of the tzaddik produce results that followers’ prayers could never achieve unaided, and even food the tzaddik has tasted is charged with spiritual power. When Hasidim visit the tzaddik’s court, they present a kvittel (written statement containing their name and pressing needs) and a pidyon nefesh (sum of money for the tzaddik’s upkeep).

Chassidim bring their deepest questions to the Rebbe—not just halachic questions, but life questions about jobs, marriage, family—and the Rebbe listens, often with uncanny ability to understand what the person is really asking underneath the words. Chassidim ask their Rebbe for brachos (blessings) before major life events, and the practice of giving a kvittel (written note with name and request) is common across Chassidic groups.

At the tish (Yiddish for “table”), on Shabbat and holidays the Rebbe sits surrounded by hundreds or thousands of followers; he makes kiddush, distributes shirayim (his leftovers), shares Torah, and sings niggunim (melodies). Contemporary practices include pilgrimages to the graves of deceased tzaddikim—Breslov Hasidim’s Rosh Hashanah pilgrimage to Rebbe Nachman’s grave in Uman, Ukraine, attracted approximately 35,000 attendees in 2024.

Tzaddik Today

The concept remains foundational across Hasidic dynasties. Each Chassidic dynasty has its own Rebbe; well-known include the Lubavitcher Rebbe (Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, 1902–1994), the Satmar Rebbe, the Belzer Rebbe, the Gerrer Rebbe, and the Bobover Rebbe. Each Hasidic group refers to its leader as “the rebbe,” and the role is usually hereditary, passed from father to son or sometimes to a son-in-law or close disciple.

Outside Hasidic contexts, the term functions more broadly. According to Jewish tradition, tzaddikim live virtuous, moral, and spiritually devout lives, serving as living examples of the highest standards of ethical behavior and devotion to God. Contemporary spiritual communities reference historical tzaddikim including Rabbi Meir Baal Haness, recognized for his wisdom, Torah scholarship, and incredible acts of kindness, and figures renowned for compassion and service.

Common Misconceptions

The tzaddik is not superhuman. The tzaddik is a human being like all of us—he feels pain and pleasure, grins, smiles, cries and laughs. Righteousness doesn’t mean perfection; Jewish sages teach that apart from seven exceptions, there has never been a righteous person who never sinned or made a mistake.

The tzaddik is not an intermediary in the Christian sense. The tzaddik functions as intermediary only in the functional sense, like a prayer leader—each person has a direct connection to God; no one needs a medium between the Almighty and themselves. A tzaddik has no power of his own; a tzaddik is merely an extension of God, here to help people by tapping into God’s powers.

Nor is tzaddik status unattainable. According to Maimonides, a tzadik is “one whose merit surpasses iniquity,” and every person can reach the level of a tzadik. The prophet Habakkuk uses an expansive definition: a righteous person is someone who lives with faith—defined not by perfection but by moments they choose to live with faith, broad enough to include someone who has made many mistakes but is simply trying to improve.

How to Begin

Study is the entry point. Begin with Tanya by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (1796), the foundational text of Chabad Hasidism that explores the psychology of the tzaddik versus the beinoni (intermediate person). Read In Praise of the Baal Shem Tov (Shivhei ha-Besht, first printed 1815), the hagiographic collection of stories about the movement’s founder and his disciples.

For contemporary engagement, attend a Hasidic tish on Shabbat if you have access to a community, or study teachings from lineages that resonate—Chabad offers extensive English materials; Breslov emphasizes individual spiritual practice. Explore the ethical dimension through classical works like Mesillat Yesharim (Path of the Just) by Moses Chaim Luzzatto (1740), which outlines stages of righteousness accessible to all.

Remember that seeking to become a tzaddik is itself a traditional path. Tzaddikim are born thus, but can also be made, through careful study, application, and service to Hashem. The pursuit is less about perfection than alignment—calibrating one’s life to justice, compassion, and the presence of the divine in everyday action.

Related terms

kabbalahhasidismrebbedevekuttzedakahtanya
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