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ByStephen Games , Stephen Games

Opinion

Why is Jewish burial so grave?

February 17, 2011 11:03
3 min read

A few weeks ago, I attended a funeral at a church in London. I found the experience uplifting, consoling and appropriate to the emotion and sense of loss. It pains me to say that I’ve never felt that at a Jewish funeral.

The service took place in St Bride’s, designed by Wren in the 1670s, just off Fleet Street. The body was then buried elsewhere, in Highgate Cemetery. The settings were beautiful, and so was the ceremony. The powerful organ made the church tremble while we sang “Immortal, invisible, God only wise”; then four friends moved us to tears playing part of Beethoven’s String Quartet in A minor. Later, we filed silently through the woodland paths of the cemetery to the burial site, surrounded by trees and ivy and chirruping birds.

Admittedly, this funeral was exceptional even by English standards: not everyone has the taste to say goodbye to a loved one like this. But even if it had been a gangland funeral with a horse-drawn black cortege and the deceased’s name spelled out in flowers, it raised the question of why Jewish funerals can’t be more personalised. Why, in short, are our ceremonies, and the places they’re held in, so regimented and bleak?

Is the problem our religion, or halacha, or something else? In the nineteenth century, “gardens of rest” were designed by architects not just as containers for the dead but as public parks with a therapeutic function. Unfortunately, Judaism has become so go-it-alone, and funerary culture in this country is so defined by the Church of England, that to question our own practices can seem disloyal.