I have been reading a book (Foucault's Pendulum), that has consistent allusions to the Kabbalah, and its adherents....
So...I looked up Kabbalah (which is written "Cabala" in the book) in Chamber's Dictionary of the Unexplained, failing to find it in Webster's Collegiate or Bulfinch's Mythology....so....now I'm enthralled...
Could you provide any material (i.e. with pages) references that have a good description and explanation of the Kabbalah...without being entirely esoteric? I mean, The Zohar is said to be nearly impossible to comprehend, even to Jewish Scholars, and I can't find much lit. online....
Thanks for your help...
-Abu
Ah, yes, lovely book,
Foucault's Pendulum! Dense reading, but lots of fun.
OK, so if you're interested in some basic explanations of Kabbalah and its nature and history, the go-to works are those of Gershom Scholem. He is the classic academic investigator of Kabbalah.
On The Kabbalah and Its Significance
Kabbalah
Origins of the Kabbalah
Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism
On The Mystical Shape of the Godhead
Those are his five best, and I think they are quite readable.
Some additional options include:
Kabbalah: The Way of Light, by Rabbi Lawrence Kushner
Kabbalah: A Very Short Introduction, by Joseph Dan
Kabbalah: A Brief Introduction for Christians, by Tamar Frankiel
Inner Space: Introduction to Kabbalah, Meditation, and Prophecy, by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
And some tangential, but worthwhile, readings include:
Jewish Magic and Superstition: A Study In Folk Religion, by Joshua Trachtenberg
The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic, and Mysticism, by Rabbi Geoffrey W. Dennis
A general rule (there are some exceptions, but few) is that books on Kabbalah by non-Jews are generally not about Jewish Kabbalah, but about non-Jewish mystical systems that claim descent from Kabbalah, or claim to be "real" Kabbalah or "lost" Kabbalah, or have simply taken the name to themselves for whatever reason. Many, if spelled Qabala or Qabalah are actually about Western Mysticism, which is a fine mystical tradition, it just happens not to be Jewish.
You should be wary of anything written by Z'ev ben Shimon Halevi. He is a sketchy character, and his authenticity is in question.
You should shun anything written by Yehuda or Michael Berg, or from the Kabbalah Centre. They are hucksters and charlatans, and what they teach is not Kabbalah, but merely Jewishly-influenced cultishness in an attempt to profit from the hapless. Also do not trust anything by Michael Laitman, or from the Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education & Research Institute (also called Bet Kabbalah l'Am): they are like the Kabbalah Centre, only slightly less odious.
Also, any book about Kabbalah that claims to reveal lost secrets of the ancients, or secrets of how to attain mystical powers, or how to attain mystical revelations, or how anyone-- Jewish or non-Jewish-- can use Kabbalah in their daily lives, are all complete wastes of time and not worth picking up.
I'm certainly not saying, BTW, that studying Kabbalah might not really be able to teach you secrets and help you attain revelations; but I do think that it could only come about through painstaking understanding of the subtlest nuances of the great mystical texts-- in the original. Hebrew is an exceptionally difficult language to translate anyhow, and mystical poetry is difficult to truly grasp in any language. But to truly comprehend Hebrew mystical poetry from a synthesis of someone's English prose translations? No.
Do feel free to ask for more recommendations, or for help with any concepts that you feel are perplexing. Always glad to help.