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Gilgul (also Gilgul neshamot or Gilgulei HaNeshamot; , Plural: Gilgulim) is a concept of or "transmigration of "

(2004). 9780812218626, University of Pennsylvania Press.
in esoteric mysticism. In , the word gilgul means "cycle" or "wheel" and neshamot is the plural for "souls." Souls are seen to cycle through or incarnations, being attached to different human over time. Which body they associate with depends on their particular task in the physical world, levels of the bodies of predecessors and so on. The concept relates to the wider processes of history in Kabbalah, involving cosmic Tikkun (Messianic rectification), and the historical dynamic of ascending and descending from generation to generation.

The esoteric explanations of gilgul were articulated in by in the 16th century, as part of the purpose of Creation.


History in Jewish thought
Reincarnation is an esoteric belief within many streams of modern Judaism but is not an essential tenet of traditional Judaism. It is not mentioned in classical sources such as the , the classical rabbinic works ( and ), or ' 13 principles of faith. Kabbalah, however, teaches a belief in gilgul; hence, the belief is universal in , which regards the Kabbalah as sacred and authoritative.

Among well-known rabbis who rejected the idea of reincarnation are , , , Jedaiah ben Abraham Bedersi (early 14th century), , Abraham ibn Daud, and Leon of Modena. Among the , Hai ben Sherira argued with in favour of gilgulim.

Rabbis who believed in the idea of reincarnation include, from Medieval times, the mystical leaders and Bahya ben Asher; from the 16th-century Levi ibn Habib, and from the mystical school of , , , and his exponent Hayyim ben Joseph Vital; and from the 18th-century: the founder of , the Baal Shem Tov, later Hasidic Masters, and the Lithuanian Jewish Orthodox leader and Kabbalist the ; and - amongst others - from the 19th/20th-century: , author of the Ben Ish Hai.

The 16th century mystical renaissance in communal marked an important development in Kabbalistic thought, with a significant impact on mystical circles and Jewish spirituality.

(2025). 9780827612860, U of Nebraska Press. .
It was also the time when Kabbalah was most widely disseminated.
(2025). 9781108139069, Cambridge University Press. .
In this context, Isaac Luria taught new explanations of the process of gilgul and identification of the reincarnations of historic Jewish figures, which Hayyim ben Joseph Vital compiled in his .

Shaar haGilgulim lists possible reincarnations: "One who has sexual relations with an animal is reincarnated as a bat, one who has relations with a menstruant non-Jewish woman, one who commits adultery is reincarnated as a donkey, with his mother as a she-ass, with a man as a rabbit or hare". can reincarnate as a fish, because "fish do not have to be ritually slaughtered before being rectified via eating". in The Shtetl Book mentions the following beliefs: "The soul of a tsadek becomes the soul of a fish. The soul of a butcher who eats treyf meat becomes the soul of a black crow. The soul of a dishonest becomes the soul of a dog. Because his prayer was as pleasing to the Lord as a dog’s bark. The soul of an informer becomes that of parrot. Because he acted like a parrot: spoke the wrong things at the wrong time to the wrong people." According to Shaar haGilgulim, a soul can even reincarnate in an inanimate object like a stone.

(2025). 9780674047280, Harvard University Press.

Historian Nathaniel Deutsch mentioned a widely reported anecdote as a modern example of the gilgul belief. In 2003, two fish cutters claimed to have encountered a talking carp at the New Square Fish Market in Rockland County, New York. The incident occurred in a Hasidic community of about 7,000 members. "The story goes that a 20-pound carp about to be slaughtered and made into gefilte fish for Sabbath dinner began speaking in Hebrew, shouting apocalyptic warnings and claiming to be the troubled soul of a revered community elder who recently died."


See also
In Judaism:

For comparison with other religions:


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