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Abigail Radnor

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Abigail Radnor,

Abigail Radnor

Opinion

Why death becomes us

October 6, 2016 10:58
2 min read

I am writing this the Sunday before Rosh Hashanah, just before I head to the cemetery to visit my father's grave. If you were hoping for a cheery, honey-dipped, shana tova-ish column, then hang in there, for there is a feel-good factor, even if it does involve a dead dad. For, like rugelach, self-deprecating humour, and pickles, I think we Jews are quite Mr Kipling when it comes to death - exceedingly good at it.

Of course, everyone's bereavement is different, even when it comes to mourning the same person. When I lost my dad, those around me lost a husband, a brother and a son, and we all dealt with it differently. My dad died after a near-decade-long battle with Alzheimer's so we had really lost him many years earlier, but a death in the family, in whichever form, is a shock. The reality of that person no longer being there makes the world feel completely unreal. Chaos can ensue.

That's when being a Jew comes in handy. Thanks to all of our codifying rituals and customs, order is restored.

I've never been more thankful for Jewish rules than when my dad died, from the demand to not leave the body alone running up to the funeral (which led to friends and family illustrating a moving display of loyalty that will never be forgotten) to the speed in which the funeral is arranged, a scheduling device akin to ripping off a plaster. There almost isn't time to dwell on your grief - you must put it in a box in for a while.