Supporting a mourner

Howard Mammon

Executive Director, Toronto Hebrew Memorial Parks

Transcription:

I’m not a big believer in just saying like, let me know what I can do, because let me know what I can do is putting the onus on the individual who’s bereaved. That’s a lot. So rather than say, let me know what I can do. How about I pick up your kids today from school? How about I bring you dinner? How about I do whatever it is? You suggest what you think you might do. So not that long ago, someone in my community lost their parent. I actually went over to their place during Shiva and brought them some books that I have here, that could be resources for them. I don’t have all the answers. But here’s some information that might be helpful to you. I will put them in touch with people who might be able to help them. I want to do I don’t want to just say, well, if you need help, let me know you reach out to me. I want to be proactive rather than reactive. One of the greatest mitzvot, a really good deed, is not the best translation. But it’s a commandment. It’s a really a positive mitzvah is derived from the word of tzivui, which is a commandment. Basically, you’re having an order to carry out. Care for the dead is one of the highest things you can do, one of the most special things you can do in Judaism. And so being part of that process of burying the dead and being part of the process of levaya hamet, which is levaya is the word in Hebrew. Levaya is the word for a funeral, what you’re doing is accompanying that person to their burial. That’s hugely important. And to the point that if someone died in a Jewish community, and no one was available to look after that dead body, you need to do it, you have to drop everything and do it. The only reason we don’t do that now in most of our communities is because we have a Chevra Kadisha that looks after it. Otherwise, you’d have to stop working or doing whatever you were doing to care for that dead person to bring them to burial. My view is that if I can go to a funeral, and I can be inspired by that person’s life, hearing stories about them, that’s hugely important. I want to come away from that funeral inspired, I want to hear about that person and their character traits. And I want to try to emulate those character traits, if they were so kind to people, I want to know about it. And I want to know what I can do to better my life. As a result of that, that’s good for me. And it’s a merit to them as well, if I can change my life as a result of how they lived their life. And the same is true when I go to the cemetery, and I see a monument, and what’s written on that monument, if I can walk away from that monument, having visited that grave, and be inspired by that person’s life, that’s really positive. That’s the message that I would tell families, when you’re considering what you’re going to put on that monument, how are you going to inspire people who visited and in three or four generations from now, that great great grandchild who didn’t know that person, what are they going to take away from reading that from that monument? What’s it going to mean to people who come and visit? So I want to be inspired by the service, if possible.

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Return to Learning Centre >

What to do when a death occurs
Traditions when someone dies
The importance of burial
The importance of burying in a Jewish cemetery
What happens at a funeral
Where to host a service
Selecting a funeral home
Jewish Beliefs in End of Life
Supporting a mourner
Kavod HaMet & Tahara
Shiva
Saying Kadish
Yizkor
Lessons from COVID
How to select a monument
Visiting a cemetery
Why to pre-plan a service

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