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The Jewish Chronicle

Give our rabbis more authority

The flip-flopping over who can eulogise at funerals is part of a power struggle within the United Synagogue.

September 4, 2008 14:44

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

3 min read

The flip-flopping over who can eulogise at funerals is part of a power struggle within the United Synagogue.

 

Goldberg the gangster has breathed his last and is about to be laid to rest. The local rabbi has gone out of town, his children are estranged, so at the funeral, the sexton asks: "Since it is the custom to say a few words in memory of the deceased, would anyone like to give the eulogy?"

After murmurs among the mourners and a prolonged silence, finally an old man steps forward and stands before the coffin. "Well", he begins, "his brother was an even bigger mamzer..."

Most letters sent to this newspaper come in response to an item in the previous weeks. But there is one subject that has produced a steady flow of correspondence over the years unprompted by any article. Why is it, people have wanted to know, that the United Synagogue allows only members of the clergy to deliver eulogies at a funeral, but not relatives?