
About
The Archive

these two great Kabbalists

Rabbi
Ashlag

The archive contains a vast collection of over 3,500 pages of original manuscripts by Rabbi Yehuda Leib Ashlag of blessed memory, the Baal HaSulam (1884-1954). These documents have been meticulously digitized in high resolution, offering a reading experience of the most revolutionary sacred writings in their authentic and original format.
Rabbi Yehuda Leib Ashlag, known as the Baal HaSulam, is considered one of the most influential Kabbalists of the 20th century. His immense body of work, containing dozens of compositions and thousands of writings from his pen, has been preserved hidden from all eyes for many decades in this archive. His profound spiritual vision led him to work for the dissemination of Kabbalistic wisdom to the broadest public, recognizing its importance for the correction of the world. These rare manuscripts offer a unique window into Rabbi Ashlag’s world, most of which have never been published.

RABBI
BRANDWEIN

The complete archive includes approximately 2,000 additional pages in the handwriting of Rabbi Yehuda Zvi Brandwein of blessed memory (1903-1969), Rabbi Ashlag’s student and spiritual successor. Rabbi Brandwein’s teachings offer a profound and fruitful continuation of his master’s path, enriching the treasures of Kabbalah.
Rabbi Yehuda Zvi Brandwein, a remarkable Torah scholar who delved deeply into Kabbalistic teachings from a young age, is considered the primary successor to Rabbi Ashlag’s path. After his master’s passing, Brandwein inherited the vast archive of sacred writings, and recognizing their importance, worked to disseminate them and even developed and expanded Kabbalistic teachings, as expressed in his own works, such as his commentary Maalot HaSulam on Tikkunei HaZohar. The archive testifies to a scholarly tradition that developed from generation to generation and the depth of work of these two great luminaries of the generation.
A DEEPER LOOK AT
What the Volumes Include
Zohar Commentary
“The Sulam” Commentary on the New Zohar
13 volumes of his monumental work “Talmud Eser Sefirot”
Hundreds of pages of various additional works
A rare composition unlike any other called Binyan Av
Photographed copies of complete articles from Pi HaCham and Or Bahir