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Jonathan Freedland

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Jonathan Freedland,

JonathanFreedland

Opinion

Since I lost my father, I have felt grateful for the Jewish way of death

Jonathan Freedland reflects on the kindness of strangers and a religion with an 'AAA rating when it comes to grieving'

October 25, 2018 14:27
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3 min read

In front of me is a pile, both real and virtual, of condolence messages, consoling me on the death of my father, Michael. He died unexpectedly at the start of this month, still working at age 83, in the faraway town of Aberdeen, South Dakota and I’ve barely got started on replying to the letters, emails, cards and tweets that have come my way ever since. But I hope, in time, to respond to every single one.

They are full of tender concern for me and my family, often accompanied by a choice anecdote from my father’s career or from his youth. Many come with wise advice about the business of bereavement, including a line that has stayed with me. “The good thing,” wrote an old friend who lost his own father not long ago, “is that you are in a religion that has got a AAA rating when it comes to grieving.”

He’s right. At each stage of this process and, I’m afraid, it’s one I’ve now been through three times I have felt grateful for the Jewish way of death, full of admiration for the sheer emotional intelligence shown by our ancestors as they established the rites and traditions that guide a Jewish mourner.

The first of these is speed. Judaism demands a swift burial, without delay. Following the deaths of my mother in 2012 and sister in 2014, that meant funerals within a day or two. But because my father died so far from home, we had to wait the best part of a week. It could have been much, much longer – I’ll come back to that but even those six days felt agonisingly long. The family were caught in an emotional no man’s land, stranded between the shock of the loss and the beginning of the grieving process. Every hour seemed to crawl by.