My father-in-law’s funeral
itself was very sad. For the first time I heard the long Jewish prayers that
years later would be used for my husband and other Jews. There was the
Mourner’s Kaddish, a eulogy, and psalms; some were in Hebrew, others in
English. It was very simple, with no flowers or music. Having grown up as a
small-town Protestant, I found the austere Jewish ceremony a stark contrast to
the funerals I attended as a child, with screechy sopranos singing along with
poorly played organs, and with the sickly sweet odor of carnations overpowering
everything. Sad as this funeral was, it seemed more comforting and appropriate.
In recent years I have attended
all too many ceremonies I think of as “happy funerals.” Yes, they are called
“celebrations of life,” with an emphasis on the dead person’s achievements and
on the mourners’ love for them. Most people today seem to prefer these rituals.
Too often, however, they seem to become performances. Mourners arrive ready to read long eulogies,
and to gather with other mourners, almost in a party atmosphere. There seems to
be little grieving, as if people are obliged to be happy.
I don’t always object to these rituals, of course. When my
friend Joani Blank learned that she would die soon of pancreatic cancer, she
sprang into action and scheduled her own celebration of life, to occur before
her death. And so one day in July, hundreds of people who loved Joani and had
benefited from her generosity gathered at the First Unitarian Church of Oakland
to thank her and to say farewell. I was unable to attend, but saw a video that
make it look like a truly joyous occasion, for Joani and everyone else, though
surely some tears were shed.
Still, in general when I attend
one of these modern funerals, I find myself feeling resentful and wishing to
hear the Kaddish. I think how much
better it would be to weep openly, to feel the pain of losing a beloved family
member or friend. First there must be a time to mourn. There is much time later
to heal the emotional wounds and return to an ordinary life, even to joyous
rebeginnings. (Another Jewish tradition is to name the next baby born in the
family for the person who died.
L’chaim!)
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