From: cil...@comcast.net
Sent: 03/06/12 04:26 PM
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [jewish-funerals] Parents kept from funerals of stillborns in Israel
May you be comforted among the mourners of Jerusalem and Zion. I know it was a long time ago, and I know the mourning never ends.
Susan
------------------------------------------------
Read my mind at www.kissamezuzah.blogspot.com
From: "Marc Barinbaum" <mach...@ryamar.com>
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, March 6, 2012 12:47:43 PM
Subject: [jewish-funerals] Parents kept from funerals of stillborns in Israel
Troubling article. I can relate since we buried our 17 day old son in 1986.
Marc Barinbaum
Report criticizes Religious Services Ministry for failing to compel burial societies to permit parents to attend funerals.
http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=260628
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I also want to recognize the beauty of the expectations we have of our
Jewish way.
All of this is happening within a greater mainstream context of
tremendous denial and repression. I've had so many experiences
comforting bereaved parents, both Jewish and non-Jewish, and with the
absolute insanity they face in this great unspoken myth that somehow
if we ignore this particular pain it will go away. For many years the
only book I could get hold of to guide me was Kohner and Henley's
_When a Baby Dies_ from HarperCollins, now 20 years old and still
profoundly relevant because there is such a gap between the
conventional approaches and what research and experience indicate.
It is beautiful that we are expecting the Jewish way to step forward
where others have turned aside; that we demand Jews care where it is
conventional not to care.
-- Talya
Very well written
I am a genealogy researcher and have spent a great deal of time reading
death certificates. It is amazing how many infants died in the not so
distant past. I think our sages knew all too well that if we mourned
miscarriages, stillbirths, and infant deaths, we would never stop mourning.
It is wonderful that we are developing ceremonies to mark these events.
They are fraught with emotion and pain. It is a miracle that they are
now happening with much less frequency, so that we can take the time to
mourn.
Ellen Barnett Cleary
Congregation Emanu-El & Congregation Sha'ar Zahav
San Francisco, CA
----- Original Message -----
From: Tree McCurdy
Sent: 03/07/12 11:07 AM
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Fw: Re: [jewish-funerals] Parents kept from funerals of stillborns in Israel
Thank you, Laurie. This was beautifully written. I also want to recognize the beauty of the expectations we have of our Jewish way. All of this is happening within a greater mainstream context of tremendous denial and repression. I've had so many experiences comforting bereaved parents, both Jewish and non-Jewish, and with the absolute insanity they face in this great unspoken myth that somehow if we ignore this particular pain it will go away. For many years the only book I could get hold of to guide me was Kohner and Henley's _When a Baby Dies_ from HarperCollins, now 20 years old and still profoundly relevant because there is such a gap between the conventional approaches and what research and experience indicate. It is beautiful that we are expecting the Jewish way to step forward where others have turned aside; that we demand Jews care where it is conventional not to care. -- Talya On Tue, Mar 6, 2012 at 7:59 PM, Laurie Dinerstein-Kurs <bu...@yours.com
> wrote: > > At a Kavod v'Nachum conference, several years back - I had the opportunity > to schmooze with a religious guy - I believe - perhaps even chabad...and I > seem to recall he lived in CA. > > Anyway, in the course of the converation, which was on burial rites - he > expressed how Jewish burial rites were so complete.......I mentioned that > when I had had a miscarriage years before, there was nothing in our > tradition to acknowledge the life that was lost...as if I had not been > pregnant for several months. The anticipation, expectation, and hope all > died along with the life. How much more painful can it be to lose a child > after it is actually born....my heart goes out to anyone who experiences > this! > > BACK THEN - The Rabbis didn't address the loss - as Judaism does not address > the loss - not of potential life - or even the death of a baby under 31 > days. But, the Rabbis do have a very strong conviction of potential life > when it comes to menstruation and ejaculation. Sadly, the "potential" for > "potential" trumps actual. > > What were the rabbis thinking when they thought to ignore these heartrending > situations??? Ignoring the loss and death may help the rabbis to move on - > but it does nothing for their flock. > > The beauty of burial and of Shiva is the degree to which it attends to the > spirit and in some way helps to foster acceptance and deal with grief. > Jewish parents are left to their own and on therir own to deal with such > tragedy. I mentioned to this gentlemen that I feel the rabbis have done an > injustice and major blunder when they failed to consider the feelings of a > woman who has had life within her...taken away so "prematurely". An then, > to add to the misery of loss - no rituals to help one through, no prayers, > no communal rites, no acknowledgement of loss....just silence. There is no > rachmones in our tradition for the mother...let alone the father. > > He said he never realized this issue existed and was somewhat apologetic for > the lack of compassion in our tradition...not that he can change it.....wait > a minute.....of course he can! > > I wonder if he has even attempted. to bring change into his community - or > if he even remembers our conversation. > > With the advent of women becoming rabbis...many new rituals and prayers > have been written and brought into the community. > > While a boy has always been welcomed as an "adult" when he turns 13, more > recently gilrs too - now girls are offered the opportunity to engage > another rite - a rite that has been advanced as a coming of age for a girl - > acknowledging her "potential" in a new way ... that when a girl begins to > menstruate - to afford her the opportunity to positively acknowlwdge her new > status with other women who will celebrate her! A celebration, a party, a > card, some flowers..however deemed appropriate for that young girl to allow > her to be acknoweldged and welcomed. > > The women have composed: > Prayers/rites, rituals for miscarriage, and rituals to embrace the grief. > Prayers/ritres/rituals for diffculties in becoming pregnant. > Prayers/rites/rituals for menopause. > > So, I would like to believe that the genetlemen with whom I spoke actually > was moved to do something. > I would like to believe that our OLD standards have been moved aside for a > new and more postive apporach. > I would like to think that our tradition is niot cloised...tha tit can > expand to the degree whrn there has been an error...it can be fixed. > > THIS tradition of ignoring loss and death of YOUNG life has got to be > fixed!! > > > > - Original Message ----- > > From: cil...@comcast.net > > Sent: 03/06/12 04:26 PM > > To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com > > Subject: Re: [jewish-funerals] Parents kept from funerals of stillborns in > Israel > > > May you be comforted among the mourners of Jerusalem and Zion. I know it was > a long time ago, and I know the mourning never ends. > > > > Susan > > ------------------------------------------------ > Read my mind at www.kissamezuzah.blogspot.com > > ________________________________ > From: "Marc Barinbaum" <mach...@ryamar.com> > To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com > Sent: Tuesday, March 6, 2012 12:47:43 PM > Subject: [jewish-funerals] Parents kept from funerals of stillborns in > Israel > > Troubling article. I can relate since we buried our 17 day old son in 1986. > > > > Marc Barinbaum > > > > > > Report criticizes Religious Services Ministry for failing to compel burial > societies to permit parents to attend funerals. > > > > http://www.jpost.com/JewishWorld/JewishNews/Article.aspx?id=260628 -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "jewish-funerals" group. To post to this group, send email to jewish-...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to jewish-funera...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jewish-funerals?hl=en.
Libby
----- Original Message -----
From: libby
Sent: 03/08/12 11:03 AM
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [jewish-funerals] Our traditions regarding stillbirths, infant deaths, and miscarriages
I agree that this is the most likely explanation. At a time of higher birth rates and higher infant mortality rates, it made sense to the sages. There are other cultures that traditionally did not give a child a name right away until one was more certain of newborn viability. Even so, I'm pretty sure the birth mothers at the time felt just as sad about the loss of a child as we do today. Many of us, myself included, have lost children and grandchildren due to miscarriages, stillbirths, and infant deaths -- it happens naturally to all species -- the amazing thing is that we can now save so many lives thanks to modern medical advances. Mothers and their families will continue to mourn the loss of children, the potential life cut short, regardless of whether or not tradition acknowledges those feelings. As others on the list have pointed out, today we can and do choose to create new mourning rituals in response. I think the Reconstructionist movement has been particularly good about responding to changing social attitudes in meaningful ways, including readings and rituals appropriate for infant death; see their "Kol Haneshamah: Prayers for a House of Mourning." Libby Ellen Barnett Cleary wrote: > I think it's important we not sell our sages short. We live in a very > different time than they did. > > I am a genealogy researcher and have spent a great deal of time > reading death certificates. It is amazing how many infants died in > the not so distant past. I think our sages knew all too well that if > we mourned miscarriages, stillbirths, and infant deaths, we would > never stop mourning. > > It is wonderful that we are developing ceremonies to mark these > events. They are fraught with emotion and pain. It is a miracle that > they are now happening with much less frequency, so that we can take > the time to mourn. > > Ellen Barnett Cleary > Congregation Emanu-El & Congregation Sha'ar Zahav > San Francisco, CA > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "jewish-funerals" group. To post to this group, send email to jewish-...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to jewish-funera...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jewish-funerals?hl=en.
I used to work as an RN in the Delivery room and the intensive care nursery. Many times I was forbidden by the dr. to show the baby that was a stillborn. But I went against them and let the parents hold the stillborn it still was their child. As far as funerals that was a subject of its own. They baby was in the morgue and the parents were told just to forget the child. That was 25 years ago. Do not know what they do now. I still remember the grief the parents went through when their small infant died after a few days and sometimes months. I tried to help. We used to give a footprint and lock of hair . My dog passed away a few years ago and the vet gave me a paw print and a lock of his hair I still have it with his photo. I am sure some the parents must have the lock of hair that I gave them. This is a very hard subject to talk about.
Sandy
So heart-breakingly honest and beautifully written. Thank you for
sharing your link about the loss of your babies via miscarriage near Tu
B-Shevat. I cried when I read it. Yes, "Jewish tradition is evolving new
ritual practices in our times" in so many ways.
Libby
----- Original Message -----
From: Simcha Raphael
Sent: 03/13/12 09:12 PM
To: jewish-funerals
Subject: [jewish-funerals] Re: Miscarriage rituals
Many years ago, my wife and I created a Miscarriage Ritual after she had had a miscarriage of triplets. It was a very healing experience. It was near Tu B'Shevat and we grounded our ritual in the theme of planting of new seeds, new life. The liturgy of that ritual is described on my website -> http://www.simcharaphael.com/lrf6.html
This is an example of how Jewish tradition is evolving new rituals practices in our times. Simcha Raphael, Ph.D. Death Awareness Educator DAAT - Death Awareness Advocacy and Training -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "jewish-funerals" group. To post to this group, send email to jewish-...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to jewish-funera...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jewish-funerals?hl=en.
“This is not your grandmothers' Judaism!!”
Let me tell you about my grandmothers Judaism. She and my grandfather,
once a Rabbi in Poland, had five children between the wars. Two died
within hours or days of birth, the other at 3 or 4 years from a
sickness that took many children from their community. The newborns
were not named and my mother, born after they migrated to Canada, doesn
’t recall the older child’s name.
My grandfather was “drafted” by the Polish army to make uniforms and
by the late 1920s he had seen enough to know where Europe was headed.
So they packed up what they could and came to Canada; my grandmother
pregnant with her sixth child, my mother, along with their two
remaining children. They settled in Canada and instead of returning to
a religious life, my Zaida opened a tailoring shop with his brother
(also “drafted”). They spent whatever spare monies they had getting
as much of their family out before and after the war. They brought many
relatives over including four cousins; two pairs of surviving Mengele
twins.
On several occasions I asked Baba about her lost children and she never
once batted an eye, saying “that was how things were”, she couldn’t
mourn long for those she didn’t know and that her life was so full of
joy with her surviving children and grandchildren, it was something she
said she never dwelled on. Perhaps it was her Jewish beliefs, her
customs, the milieu in which this all took place that shaped her world
view about the death of her children. I just know that her Orthodox
understanding of her world “then” let her move forward.
In my own experience, my first wife and I tried to have children in our
mid 30s which, as any physician will tell you, isn’t the best time to
start. Doctors often referred to us as being infertile while I (and as
far as I could bring my wife along at the time) persisted with the
mindset that we were simply “not pregnant yet”. During the second and
third years of trying to have children my wife had two miscarriages,
one at about 18 weeks, the second at about 21 weeks. Of course we felt
devastated, grief stricken, very much alone and completely unsupported.
The hospital counselor visited with us but there was never any
followup, no sense of lost life on the part of the medical staff, just
a failed pregnancy. Since we were both pro-choice and believed - at
least until this whole process started - that life began at birth, I
believe this may well have helped mitigate some of the pain and loss we
might otherwise have experienced. I think that if we had imbued the
fetuses we lost with living human characteristics, we might never have
survived. I also think my immediate switch from “we’re not pregnant
yet” to “ we’ve just not had a baby yet” attitude kept us going.
After four years of trying, and with the help of some blessed medical
specialists, we conceived our first born daughter naturally who was
naturally delivered at full term. Our second daughter arrived 20 months
later. Their mother and I are now divorced, happily remarried and have
a business-like co-parenting relationship of our teenage daughters.
My point is that I too - by the understanding and beliefs of a number
of people who have posted in this thread - have experienced the loss of
a child. Yet, as difficult as it was at the time, the loss seemed more
like one of potential than of an actual person. I have no doubt my
views would be different had each of those pregnancies lasted longer or
even went to term. But I understand the view of traditional Judaism on
this matter and have no doubt it helped shape my Baba’s losses as
things she was able to move through.
Today I think it’s merciless for anyone to deny the right or need of
another to mourn the loss of someone or something precious to them.
And, there is no question that there are segments of Judaism today that
are simply ignorant or indifferent to this. That said, when I begin
reading about liturgical rituals for miscarriages - and I know that
they represent a significant advancement of thought and process to
offer healing and comfort - I can’t say that such a process would have
been helpful in my case. If anything, it very might have reified our
apparent infertility which could have been just as devastating.
I think these practices have come about as wonderful templates for
growth and change in our models of bereavement efforts, but I have some
trouble linking their emergence with something inherently lacking in
our religion. You’re right when you say this isn’t your grandmother’
s Judaism and to some extent that saddens me.
I think the real point of this thread shouldn’t be seen in isolation
as Judaism not accommodating the needs of parents who seek but are
unable to grieve for their lost children. Instead I think it should be
viewed as part of a larger tension between the growth and influence of
fervent Orthodoxy and those who are unable or unwilling to be part of
it.
----- Original Message -----
From: Kerry Swartz
Sent: 03/14/12 05:44 PM
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [jewish-funerals] Re: Miscarriage rituals
I have great sympathy for any parent(s), grandparent(s) or others who have lost a child and I clearly acknowledge the disconnect between Orthodox precepts and the world in which we live today, especially on this topic. I think it’s also important to remember this thread started by discussing the terrible conflict a grieving couple had when they came up against the Orthodox institutions that dominate where they live. “This is not your grandmothers' Judaism!!” Let me tell you about my grandmothers Judaism. She and my grandfather, once a Rabbi in Poland, had five children between the wars. Two died within hours or days of birth, the other at 3 or 4 years from a sickness that took many children from their community. The newborns were not named and my mother, born after they migrated to Canada, doesn ’t recall the older child’s name. My grandfather was “drafted” by the Polish army to make uniforms and by the late 1920s he had seen enough to know where Europe was headed. So they packed up what they could and came to Canada; my grandmother pregnant with her sixth child, my mother, along with their two remaining children. They settled in Canada and instead of returning to a religious life, my Zaida opened a tailoring shop with his brother (also “drafted”). They spent whatever spare monies they had getting as much of their family out before and after the war. They brought many relatives over including four cousins; two pairs of surviving Mengele twins. On several occasions I asked Baba about her lost children and she never once batted an eye, saying “that was how things were”, she couldn’t mourn long for those she didn’t know and that her life was so full of joy with her surviving children and grandchildren, it was something she said she never dwelled on. Perhaps it was her Jewish beliefs, her customs, the milieu in which this all took place that shaped her world view about the death of her children. I just know that her Orthodox understanding of her world “then” let her move forward. In my own experience, my first wife and I tried to have children in our mid 30s which, as any physician will tell you, isn’t the best time to start. Doctors often referred to us as being infertile while I (and as far as I could bring my wife along at the time) persisted with the mindset that we were simply “not pregnant yet”. During the second and third years of trying to have children my wife had two miscarriages, one at about 18 weeks, the second at about 21 weeks. Of course we felt devastated, grief stricken, very much alone and completely unsupported. The hospital counselor visited with us but there was never any followup, no sense of lost life on the part of the medical staff, just a failed pregnancy. Since we were both pro-choice and believed - at least until this whole process started - that life began at birth, I believe this may well have helped mitigate some of the pain and loss we might otherwise have experienced. I think that if we had imbued the fetuses we lost with living human characteristics, we might never have survived. I also think my immediate switch from “we’re not pregnant yet” to “ we’ve just not had a baby yet” attitude kept us going. After four years of trying, and with the help of some blessed medical specialists, we conceived our first born daughter naturally who was naturally delivered at full term. Our second daughter arrived 20 months later. Their mother and I are now divorced, happily remarried and have a business-like co-parenting relationship of our teenage daughters. My point is that I too - by the understanding and beliefs of a number of people who have posted in this thread - have experienced the loss of a child. Yet, as difficult as it was at the time, the loss seemed more like one of potential than of an actual person. I have no doubt my views would be different had each of those pregnancies lasted longer or even went to term. But I understand the view of traditional Judaism on this matter and have no doubt it helped shape my Baba’s losses as things she was able to move through. Today I think it’s merciless for anyone to deny the right or need of another to mourn the loss of someone or something precious to them. And, there is no question that there are segments of Judaism today that are simply ignorant or indifferent to this. That said, when I begin reading about liturgical rituals for miscarriages - and I know that they represent a significant advancement of thought and process to offer healing and comfort - I can’t say that such a process would have been helpful in my case. If anything, it very might have reified our apparent infertility which could have been just as devastating. I think these practices have come about as wonderful templates for growth and change in our models of bereavement efforts, but I have some trouble linking their emergence with something inherently lacking in our religion. You’re right when you say this isn’t your grandmother’ s Judaism and to some extent that saddens me. I think the real point of this thread shouldn’t be seen in isolation as Judaism not accommodating the needs of parents who seek but are unable to grieve for their lost children. Instead I think it should be viewed as part of a larger tension between the growth and influence of fervent Orthodoxy and those who are unable or unwilling to be part of it. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "jewish-funerals" group. To post to this group, send email to jewish-...@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to jewish-funera...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/jewish-funerals?hl=en.
----- Original Message -----
From: LGP...@aol.com
Sent: 03/16/12 02:44 PM
To: jewish-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [jewish-funerals] Re: Miscarriage rituals
----- Original Message -----
From: Gabriela Bebchick
Sent: 03/18/12 06:42 PM