In the days following my father’s death on March 11th, I’ve missed
more consecutive days of live radio broadcasting than any other time
since my show began nearly thirteen years ago. Since I don’t take
extended vacations and even manage to broadcast frequently from the
road (in Israel, Hawaii, New York, wherever) most of the time, missing
five days in a row stands out as a break in tradition and deserves
some explanation.
That explanation might also serve to answer the well-meaning questions
I’ve received from listeners and friends who’ve generously sent their
condolences over the loss of my father.
Since Jews are a tiny minority in the United States, and religious
Jews constitute a minority within that minority, it’s worth trying to
explain the fundamentals of the seven-day mourning process I’m just
concluding.
First, it’s worth noting that Jewish tradition requires prompt burial
as a matter of respect. In contrast to the Egyptian civilization that
developed next door to ancient Israel, Jews don’t do anything to
embalm or preserve or decorate the body. The idea of mummification and
elaborate, carved sarcophagi – or the public display of a preserved
body, as with Lenin in Red Square – would be anathema to Jews of
yesterday or today. We believe that God’s will mandates the natural
process of decay, after the soul has left the body. In the Book of
Genesis, as part of the banishment of human beings from the Garden of
Eden, God declares: ”In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread,
till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for
dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” (3:19).
This means that our laws demand that the departed be returned to the
ground (from which he came) as quickly as possible, with delays only
for extraordinary circumstances. I heard about my dad’s passing around
midnight on last Tuesday night, then managed to get on the plane to
Israel at 6.30 the next morning, arriving (with my brother Harry) just
before sunset at the Jerusalem hilltop cemetery just as the memorial
service began. My father lay before us in a plain, tightly wrapped
white shroud, covered with the prayer shawl he had used in synagogue
for several decades. There is no coffin – not even the unadorned pine
box used by religious Jews elsewhere – in Jerusalem funerals. The
ceremony emphasizes bringing the departed directly and quickly into
contact with the holy soil of this special place where, in my father’s
case, he chose to live the last 19 of his 83 years.
When we arrived at the funeral a large crowd (more than 200 people)
had already assembled and begun listening to the beautiful words, in
Hebrew, of one of my dad’s best friends, Dr. Jospeh Bodenheimer,
President of the Jersualem College of Technology (one of the leading
high tech training institutions in the world). After that, my brother
Jonathan spoke, then my brother Harry, then me recalling the features
of my father’s life and personality that made him so important to so
many people he touched and inspired.
I actually cut my remarks short because we were racing the sun. In
Jewish tradition, the day ends and a new day begins with sunset (based
on the Genesis description, “It was evening, and it was morning, the
first day”). Having already delayed the burial for a full day to allow
the arrival of his sons from abroad, the Chevra Kadisha (“Holy
Brotherhood,” supervising religious authorities on matters of death
and bereavement) wanted to make sure we brought my dad to his place of
rest before the sun went down.
Six friends lifted my father’s body onto a simple stretcher, and
helped to carry him to a wooded hillside with sweeping views of the
city. As the other mourners arrived they lowered him into a deep grave
cut into the rocky soil, then covered him over with fitted marble
slabs. Burials in Jerusalem have followed precisely the same
procedures for literally thousands of years, and in the gathering dusk
I stood with my brothers and recited the ancient memorial prayer (in
Aramaic), the Kaddish (“Holiness”). Though often misidentified as a
“prayer for the dead,” this formulation never mentions death, grief or
afterlife. The real theme is proclaimed in the opening line:
“Magnified and sanctified be His great Name in the world He created
according to His will.”
In other words, rather than asking specific mercy on the departed, or
comfort for the bereaved, we respond to death by acknowledging God’s
power, majesty and control of every aspect of our lives. To honor the
memory of a loved one, mourners recite this declaration in morning,
afternoon and evening prayers every day for the eleven months
following burial. The challenge is that a prayer quorum (minyan) of
ten adult Jewish males is required to say the kaddish, which means
that in honoring a loved one who has died you must depend on, or
return to, a religious community. In that way, the eleven months as a
mourner has served for many disaffiliated or indifferent individuals
as a path back to commitment or continuity.
The first seven days after the funeral, this observance is no problem
since the prayer quorum comes to you. The word “shiva” means, simply,
seven, and denotes the first week after a burial when close relatives
(children, spouses, parents of the deceased) gather together in a
house of mourning without undertaking their normal jobs or activities.
It’s considered a religious obligation to visit such a house, to bring
words of comfort and specially prepared foods, and to join in the
prayers three times a day. The close relatives sit on the floor or on
low benches, and receive the visitors who stream through the home in a
course of a busy, demanding but oddly uplifting week.
We “sat shiva” (observing the week of mourning) in my brother
Jonathan’s house in Jerusalem, not far from where my father lived and
the tree-shaded plot where he rests now. The stream of visitors has
been amazing –including some of the most celebrated political,
cultural and religious leaders in Israel, coming to pay their respects
to my father’s memory. The first prayer service began at 7.30 each
morning and the last visitors finally went home about 11.00 PM each
night. The conversations often centered on little recollections (often
humorous) about my dad and his many endearing quirks, but also ran far
afield to cover politics (both American and Israeli), mutual friends,
the chances of economic recovery, family history, or even favorite
foods.
The restriction on ordinary work made it impossible for me to
broadcast the show this week, though my brothers did join me in a
telephone conversation with my guest host (my friend and colleague,
Dave Boze) about my dad and the mourning process. In many instances,
the week of mourning provides the first chance for siblings to live
together under the same roof (and to share every meal together) since
childhood. On occasion, the close quarters and the impact of loss can
produce raw feelings – like a religious version of the awful reality
show, “Big Brother.” For the Medved boys, the chance of sharing all
this time together proved precious and life-affirming --- helping us
rediscover how much we have in common and how much, despite the vast
geographic distances between us, we all remain our father’s sons.
For me, the most difficult restriction of the mourning week involves
shaving. With no reduction in stubble since receiving news of my dad’s
death, my face feels grubby and scratchy and disgusting, and I’m sure
I look like a big-time terrorist suspect -- though I don’t know
because mirrors are covered in a house of mourning (in order to
de-emphasize vanity). I keep rubbing the bristly growth on my cheeks
as if that could make it go away and yearning for the moment
(tomorrow) when I can finally trim my facial fuzz. Because I speak in
public as part of my work (with two major lectures in Michigan and
Chicago on Wednesday and Thursday night), most authorities accept the
idea that I can shave to preserve my vaguely respectable appearance.
Other mourners will wait a whole month (the thirty days, or shloshim,
which represents the next stage of the grieving process) before they
resort to a razor.
During this week of receiving visitors and comforters, I’ve spoken
with literally hundreds of people – some of them close family members
and friends, other who are neighbors of my brother’s who I’ve never
met before, still others who count as old friends who I hadn’t seen in
twenty years or more. Some of those who’ve cycled through this house
have been deeply devout, others proudly secular, still others
disengaged or undecided about their relationship to God or to
religious tradition.
On the phone, I spoke with a Christian friend who wondered whether all
the restrictions and regulations of Jewish practice didn’t seem
burdensome, even obnoxious, at a time of grief and hurt and
vulnerability.
I explained that on the contrary, the confusion and shock and
uncertainty associated with death makes the rules and traditions
particularly welcome. Informed of the passing of a loved one, the
normal reaction for most people would be, “What do I do now? Where do
I go from here?”
The traditional mourning process answers those questions directly and
decisively. You’re reminded above all that you hardly count as the
first person (or even the first in your family) to endure a troubling
loss. The seven days following the burial serve as a solid bridge back
to normal life, with each step specifically and clearly demarcated.
The fellowship and focus should, ideally, bring families closer
together, emphasizing precisely those values of community and
continuity that my father devoted much of his life to advancing.
Of course, my father’s loss impoverishes all his sons and admirers,
but on another level, when I get up from the week of remembrance and
return to my own precious family in the United States, I will have
been undoubtedly enriched by the mourning process, for all its
challenges and inconvenience.