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Judaism

Death, a last act of faith

The Yom Kippur prayers recall rabbis who were martyrs - but how far are they a role model?

September 16, 2010 10:23
Ancient heroes: one by one, the seven sons of Hannah choose to be killed rather than publicly eat pork at the bidding of the Greek occupiers of Israel, as told by the Book of Maccabees

ByRabbi Jeremy Rosen, Rabbi Jeremy Rosen

3 min read

Martyrdom does not figure as prominently in Judaism as it does in other religions. There is no hint of it in the Bible until Daniel is thrown into the lion's den in Babylon. If Israelites died, it was defending their lands, conquering others or simply carrying out royal commands.

It was the Maccabees who promoted the idea of laying down one's life for religion in the apocryphal Book of the Maccabees, after Antiochus introduced measures against Judaism in the second century BCE. This glorification of resistance coincided with the rise of the "Early Chasidim" and messianism. Willingness to die was always helped by hopes of what might come afterwards.

Most rabbis of the Talmud were not advocates of armed resistance. Rome required political loyalty, not religious conformity. But under the Roman Emperor Hadrian in the Second Century CE, who did indeed ban Jewish practice, religious resistance once again became a significant factor. The Talmudic narrative describes how the rabbis argued against Rabbi Akiva's active resistance. Yet in the end they admired the way he recited the Shema, the ultimate expression of Jewish identity, as he was being tortured to death.

The moving Eyleh Ezkerah poem that is now included in our Yom Kippur liturgy is medieval, but it uses earlier sources to describe how 10 great rabbis died at Roman hands for their faith. Talmudic law says that one should be willing to die rather than contravene Jewish law for only three reasons: idolatry, murder and immorality. Otherwise survival trumps all else. But as Rome, and then Christianity, challenged Jewish survival, the idea of Kiddush Hashem, Sanctifying God's Name, by being willing to die for religion, gained in significance. I suspect the Roman idea of falling on one's sword, although completely against Jewish law in spirit as well as letter, influenced some Jews to think that death in the name of honour might be a praiseworthy act.