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Antony Barnett

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Antony Barnett,

Antony Barnett

Opinion

Weeping at my auntie’s Zoom levoyah

When Antony Barnett's Auntie P died, he had to watch her funeral online

May 14, 2020 15:20
The gates of Rainham cemetery
5 min read

Jewish funerals are odd affairs at the best of times. No flowers, no music and — God forbid — no viewing of the deceased.

Our cemeteries are monochrome. No ornate headstones standing tall among manicured greenery. Just a phalanx of pale slabs sombrely protruding from turned brown soil. In life, some of us Jews might like glitz but in death all Jews are socialists. There must be no distinction made between rich and poor.

And this goes for our coffins, too. No mahogany, walnut or cherry. Chipwood or balsa will do. And the more biodegradable the better . This is not a green initiative from the Chief Rabbi but our corpses have to decompose as quickly as possible. So no nails and definitely no embalming. These death traditions come from the book of Genesis which tells us: “For dust you are and to dust you shall return.”

But who cares about dust now? These are among the worst of times.

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