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Claire Calman

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Claire Calman,

claire calman

Opinion

When we reach out for comfort, our bereavement rituals embrace us all

Attending a funeral or shiva to support the mourners, regardless of whether or not you knew the deceased, is a Jewish tradition that should be more widely adopted

October 29, 2020 12:17
A young couple hand by hand GettyImages-1145440675
3 min read

Death is an everyday tragedy. Especially at the moment. It is rare to meet someone who has made it to adulthood without having lost someone fairly close. When I say “adulthood”, I mean, say, 30, rather than 18: able to hold down a job, sustain a relationship, disagree with someone without hurling crockery, make chicken soup from scratch — Jewish adulthood then... though the only one I could say I manage with any confidence in my 50s is the soup bit. By the age of 30, I had lost my step-dad, my great-aunt, my last two remaining grandparents and my father.

Years ago, I worked with a woman who was in her early 30s and had never been bereaved. There was something oddly Teflon-y about her, untouched, as if life as well as death had not yet left its fingerprints on her face or her mind. Bereavement makes us grow up, whether we like it or not. Our sense of loss is at the heart of what it means to be human, our consciousness of what loss is, and our need to find ways to make it bearable, so that we can carry on. Our Judaism offers a framework to hold us, to contain the shocking rawness of grief in a comforting, familiar vessel.

There is to be an online Zoom shiva for a close friend’s father-in-law, Henry Ebner. Although I met him only a couple of times, at his grandchildren’s bat- and barmitzvahs, I am of course here, via my laptop, for those who mourn, primarily his son and his wife, my friend. This is a Jewish tradition that I think should be adopted more widely — the idea that it is important to attend a funeral or shiva to support the mourners, regardless of whether or not you knew the deceased.

Although I have joined in online services for Friday night, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur etc and had the occasional Zoom meeting, I am not sure what to expect from a Zoom shiva. Surely it won’t be the same as the real thing? Might it feel sterile?