So all the great Rabbis are idolators? What about Maran from the Shulhan Aruh- which is the outline for Jews to keep the laws, he was an idolator also? - What about The Holy Ari- who lived in his time and their were associated who not only believed in gilgulim- but was able (because he reached such a high spiritual level) to see people and things (rocks, animals,etc.) and tell who they were and what they need correction in. Are they all liers according to you?
Also in the Talmud their is a hint- which says that if a person would see who he eats, he wouldn't be able to eat (or something like that, didnt have the quote exactly, but I can point out if you request, where I got that from).
You didn't read what I said, I said that Gilgul is
based on Idolatry. So that means that these Rabbis who believe in Gilgul in my opinion, are wrong on this issue and have a belief based on Idolatry. G-d forbid they are actually practicing idolatry! They just are wrong on this issue and people have a right to be wrong, no one is perfect. Tzvi, you have a faulty belief that most Charedim have, that a Rabbi must be perfect to be considered "Holy" or a "Gadol Hador" or a "Tzadik" or Saint. The truth is that you do not have to be perfect to be a Holy Saint, in fact no person is perfect or right on everything and everyone sins sometimes. The stories that survive the generations of Rabbis that died a long time ago are only the greatest miraculous stories about the Rabbi (sometimes exaggerated), none of the mundane stories survive of the mortal aspects of these Rabbis or how they weren't born a Gadol Hador but were regular people that made themselves great. If you want to see real unedited stories about the great Tzadikim than read the Torah and the Tanach where it lists frequently the sins of the greatest of leaders but that did not stop them from being considered in G-d's eyes the greatest of Tzadikim. That "hint" from the Talmud is no "hint" in my opinion, and you are seeing something that is not there simply because you want to see it.
My tradition passed down from my father and grandfather has no existence of Gilgul in it.