According to
Jacob Emden, the son of the aforementioned Tzvi Ashkenazi, the Golem is said to have grown so that the rabbi feared that he might destroy the world. Finally, the rabbi extracted the
Shem from the forehead of his Golem, which returned to dust, thereby rendering it
met (dead)(מת). Although Emden only mentions a scratch on the rabbi's face, a different version of the legend states that while trying to remove the life-giving name of God in an attempt to destroy the raging beast, Rabbi Elijah was crushed to death under the weight of the Golem as it fell to pieces. Elijah's grandsons, Tzvi Ashkenazi and his son Jacob Emden, were both great
Halakhists. They discussed the legal status of the golem: could the golem be counted in a
minyan, the quorum of ten men required for prayer. Human form and modicum of understanding were not enough to make something human. The tale about Elijah's creation of the Golem was retold in the book
Israel der Gotteskampfer der Baalschem von Chełm und sein Golem ("Israel God's fighter of Baalshem of Chełm and his Golem") written by
Chayim Block and published in 1920.
The attic of the Old Synagogue According to the "
Jewish Life and Work in Chełm" chapter of the
Commemoration Book of Chełm (Poland) (
Yisker-bukh Chełm), "No one was allowed to enter the attic of the Old
Synagogue. No one even knew where the key to the attic could be found. One person whispered to another the secret that in the attic there lies the golem of the famous Rabbi Elijah Ba'al Shem. It was said that Elijah Ba'al Shem created from clay a golem who would stand on market days with an ax in his hand, and as soon as he saw that a peasant was going to beat up a Jew, the golem killed the peasant. An entire week the golem served the Rabbi, the Rabbi's wife, and he performed the manual labor in the Beit Hamidrash [A Jewish house of study where the study of the Torah is undertaken]. When the local landowner found out about the golem's might, the Ba'al Shem led the golem to the attic, withdrew from him the ineffable name of God, and converted the golem into a heap of clay. The Ba'al Shem locked the door, took with him the key, and since then the attic remained bolted." ==German-Jews of Jerusalem and the Crusades==