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Shemini-Passover: Kaddish |
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-- Honoring
the conclusion of reciting Kaddish for my father, Gershon
Jacobson, Nissan 19 5766, April 17, 2006 --
I
am G-d Who lifted you out of Egypt to be your G-d. Therefore
be holy since I am holy
– end of this week’s Torah portion (Leviticus 11:45)
Is there anything more powerful than death?
Attempts to beat mortality have consumed man from
the beginning of time. The Pharaoh’s of old tried
to achieve immortality through embalmment. Today some are
trying through cryogenic freezing. Even our
cosmetics industry, botox and all, is part of the timeless
quest desperately searching for the “fountain of youth,”
anything that can arrest the aging process.
These efforts have only been accentuated by the human
fear of death. Some argue that the fear of death is the
root of all fears, and the driving force that shapes most
(if not all) of our ambitions to leave a lasting mark on
the universe; to be remembered even after death.
Indeed, some religions and philosophies feel that
the refusal of human beings to acknowledge the imminence
of death and impermanence is a fundamental cause of the
confusion and ignorance that prevents spiritual progress.
Spiritual growth, they believe, is achieved not by cowering
from death, but by confronting it head on. They therefore
prescribe an elaborate strategy to incorporate into daily
life the mindfulness of death, to seriously engage the truth
of impermanence and, in turn, to comprehend the true nature
of human existence.
Yet other religious persuasions view the material
world as fundamentally evil, only meant to be a springboard
to the spiritual delights of heaven, when we will be freed
of the shackles of this corrupt universe. Some fanatic elements
even glorify death, especially martyrdom, as a direct ticket
to heavenly reward.
But after all the attempts, and after everything
is said and done, nothing seems to be able to beat death.
And so I thought. Until… Until I lost my father and
began saying Kaddish for him every day – 16 times a day
on average, for a total of 5212 times during these past
eleven months (1) – the traditional period for saying Kaddish
after a parent, which my siblings and I have just concluded.
Kaddish has many meanings and many benefits. The
Talmudists explain how it protects the soul from harsh judgments;
how it serves as a merit to the life of the departed. The
mystics explain how it helps the soul elevate from level
to level, from world to world.
Following the death of his father, Leon Wieseltier
wrote his fascinating journal-like book, Kaddish,
documenting his personal Kaddish journey, juxtaposed over
his research in the background and sources of the Kaddish
prayer.
Death is a profound personal experience – perhaps
the most defining one in our entire lives. As such, each
of us experiences Kaddish differently.
I will therefore briefly share one aspect of my subjective
journey.
But first let us look at the actual Kaddish text:
Yeetgadal
v'yeetkadash sh'mey rabbah
Exalted and hallowed be His great Name
B'almah dee v'rah kheer'utey
throughout the world which He has created according to His
will.
v' yamleekh malkhutei, v’yatzmach purkonei
vikorov mishichei
May He establish His kingship, give blossom
to His redemption and hasten [the [coming of] His Messiah.
b'chahyeykhohn, uv' yohmeykhohn, uv'chahyei
d'chohl beyt yisrael,
in your lifetime and in your days, and in the lifetime of
the entire House of Israel,
ba'agalah u'veez'man kareev, v'eemru: Amein.
speedily and soon. And say: Amen.
Y'hey sh'met rabbah m'varach l'alam u'l'almey
almahyah.
May His great Name be blessed forever and to all eternity.
Yeet'barakh, v'yeesh'tabach, v'yeetpa'ar,
v'yeetrohmam, v'yeet'nasei,
Blessed and praised, glorified, exalted and extolled,
v' yeet'hadar, v' yeet'aleh, v' yeet'halal
sh'mey d'kudshah b'reekh hoo
honored, upraised and lauded be the Name of the Holy One,
Blessed be He
L'eylah meen kohl beerkhatah v'sheeratah,
beyond all the blessings and songs,
toosh'b'chatah v'nechematah, da'ameeran
b'al'mah, v'eemru: Amein
praises and consolations that are uttered in the world.
And say: Amen.
Y'hei shlamah rabbah meen sh'mahyah,v'chahyeem
tovim aleynu
May there be abundant peace from Heaven, and a good life
for us
v'al kohl yisrael, v'eemru: Amein
and for all Israel. And say: Amen.
Oseh shalom beem'roh'mahv, hoo ya'aseh shalom,
He Who makes peace in His heights [heavens], may He make
peace,
aleynu v'al kohl yisrael v'eemru: Amein
for us and for all Israel. And say: Amen.
The most blatant omission in Kaddish is the soul
of the deceased. Not even the slightest mention is made
about our beloved one, not even about his or her soul. The
entire Kaddish focuses exclusively on the Divine, exalting
the greatness of G-d and His great name. Even when we briefly
mention the benefit of “peace” and “good
life,” it is only in context of connecting to G-d.
But therein lies the power of Kaddish, and its ability
to conquer death and the pain of loss.
In its infinite wisdom, Kaddish knows that nothing
can really be said to console us for our losses. No words
can justify or minimize the far-reaching effects of experiencing
death. Even the great Moses shuddered
when confronted with death.
Nothing, absolutely nothing, can conquer the mystery
of death. Its finality – I no longer can speak with
my father – is just too overwhelming, too unfathomable
for our beings to contain.
Yes, we can talk about the deceased as perhaps a
nice memory, but it hardly compensates for the loss. Any
attempt to remember or reflect on the life of the deceased,
any effort to build something in his memory, is only as
powerful as the mortal strength we invest in the effort.
As mortals ourselves how can we ever expect to defy and
conquer mortality?
The only thing that can subdue the sheer inscrutability
of death is the Source of all reality – a place that
precedes and transcends life and death. The big question
“why do people die” is linked to the even bigger
question “why are people born?” The mystery
of death is entwined with the mystery of life. However,
with our limited knowledge we are much more concerned with
the former question than the latter. When we lose something
we wonder why; when we have it we often take it for granted.
The only thing more powerful than death is not life
(as we know it), but the source of life, the One who gives
and takes life. As Beruriah, the great wife of Rabbi Meir,
consoled her husband, upon the death of their two sons,
with words to this effect: “A soul is comparable to
an object which was given to us - to each individual, to
his or her parents and loved ones, to guard and watch over
for a limited time. When the time comes for the object to
be returned to its rightful owner, should we not be willing
to return it? With regard to our sons, let us therefore
consider the matter as ‘The L-rd gave, and the L-rd
took back, may the Name of the L-rd be Blessed!’”
Kaddish embraces you and your loss like nothing can.
We don’t focus on our own pain and loss, we don’t
focus on the departed life – but on the source of
all life, the source of the immortal soul — Yeetgadal
v'yeetkadash sh'mey Rabbah.
In your time of need, in your moment of loss, when
nothing can truly console you –death is just too final,
too impenetrable – the sanctity of G-d in Kaddish,
hugs you in its tight embrace, never letting go. For eleven
straight months, three times a day, Kaddish, over 5200 times
– yes, five thousand two hundred times – we
are completely engulfed in glorifying G-d’s name,
as it cradles us in its grasp.
Nothing else would do.
So is there anything more powerful than death? Can
we ever beat death? Not if we hold on to our limited vision
of life. Life is not stronger than death. On the contrary;
Death ends life as we know it.
But if we embrace the Giver of life — or rather
allow Him to embrace us — through the Kaddish —
Yeetgadal v'yeetkadash sh'mey Rabbah — then we
achieve immortality. We connect to the immortal soul of
the departed, and to the source of all immortality.
Life alone does not beat death. But life with purpose
– with Divine purpose – beats death.
This is the ultimate view of Torah on death: As opposed
to the abovementioned beliefs, Judaism does not accept death
as the final destination, neither does it embrace or glorify
death; death remains an aberration (a result of the sin
of the Tree of Knowledge). The Torah also recognizes this
world as dark and cruel, but only on the surface; within
its very fiber materialism contains enormous stores of spiritual
energy, only to be released though our acts of virtue (mitzvot),
which refine the world into a place which can co-exist and
be fully integrated with spirit. Sin and evil in the world
temporarily conceal the hidden “sparks” (energy)
and eventually bring on death – a temporary separation
between the body from its soul, which is eternal and lives
on even after death. But through our connection to G-d (Yeetgadal
v'yeetkadash sh'mey Rabbah) and through our efforts
of refining matter and releasing its Divine energy we prepare
the universe for its ultimate experience – when death
will no longer be, and the body will be reunited forever
with its soul.
So, thank you little Kaddishel. Thank you for being
there for me, for embracing me in my time of loss, for protecting
me against the finality of death, for teaching me the secret
of immortality. Thank you for allowing me to connect in
ways I never imagined possible to the purpose of it all,
to the purpose of my existence.
Thank you Kaddishel.
Now I bid you farewell. I hope we never meet again.
________
(1) The calculation of 5212 was deduced this way:
Our custom (Chabad) is to say Kaddish (at least) 16 times
each weekday (as the Rebbe Rashab writes): 8 times in the
morning service; 4 times both in the afternoon and evening
service. Additionally, we say Kaddish one more time after
the Psalms in the morning and before the Amidah in the evening,
totaling 18 times Kaddish each weekday. On Shabbat, Holidays
and Rosh Chodosh, when we don’t lead the minyan, we
say Kaddish 9-13 times daily. On Erev Shabbat, Yom Tov and
Rosh Chodosh, we say Kaddish 15 times (with some exceptions).
On the Shabbat when we bless the New Month and Yom Kippur
eve another 5 times Kaddish is said, following each of the
five books of Psalms.
Throughout the year (eleven months minus one day)
since the passing, there were 189 weekdays, 133 days of
Shabbat, Holidays and Rosh Chodosh (some days overlap with
each other), including Erev (the day preceding) Shabbat,
holidays and Rosh Chodosh, 11 Shabbat Mevorchim’s
and 1 Yom Kippur, the resulting totals for the entire year
are:
189 x 18 = 3402
133 x 13 = 1729 + 21 (to cover for the days when
Kaddish is said more than 13 times) = 1750
12 x 5 = 60
TOTAL = 5212
It should also be noted that there are four types
of Kaddish: Mourners, Short, Complete, Rabbinic.
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Harriet Reiter, 05/03/2010 is there a time frame? | My parents are decased but I never said daily kaddish. I belong to both Orthodox and Conservative congregations.
I am fortuneate to be counted in a Conservative minyon, and there I attend almost daily. I lost my daughter on May 31, 2009. Halacha is "men say kaddish". Therefore, as I am following my own soul path in connecting with my daughter's soul, I shall say Kaddish beyond the prescribed time. If I didn't "force myself" at times to get to shul to do this, I would probably not leave my house or office.
 | , 04/27/2006
| I said Kaddish every morning for eleven months for my son, Michoel Asher, age 23 years, whose life tragically ended after a brief and sudden illness.
Saying Kaddish was the only thing that kept me going from one day to the next. I had to show up and be with others, I had to dress, to care for myself at least enough to go to say Kaddish, it was the only thing that was important for me to do.
The function of my saying Kaddish each morning is beautiful and G-d connecting and praising, and not at all mentioning the passing or the grief. Yes, it was all to praise the Omnipotent One, to re-connect with the Creator of all, of life and all death.
However, another function that saying Kaddish served for me was a totally practical one, a simple one, and one that saved MY life. And this is what it was----- I HAD TO SHOW UP!
Yes, I had to show up every morning to say Kaddish for my son. Not a day could go by without my saying Kaddish. I have no idea where I would be if G-d did not lay out the steps to follow. I felt that my life could not go on without my son. But I needed to show up every morning to say Kadish.
What would I have done without it?? I hesitate to think about that.
 | Rabbi Craig Wyckoff, 04/27/2006
| The purpose of a funeral is to comfort the mourneers and praise the deceased. When you say Kaddish you are praising God -the artist that created us {think about a work of art}. Praising the artist that created us is the greatest praise you can give the work of art {the deceased}. When you think about it even though the Kaddish doesn't mention the dead it is perfect.
 | Rabbi Berel Levertov, 04/27/2006
| Nice.
An additional point to be made, is that this experience is not done alone but rather is shared with the community, for Kadish can, and should, only be recited within a community of ten.
 | Miryam Swerdlov, 04/27/2006
| Wow! From where do u get THAT ability to go inside out? I was moved to tears. Though I said no kaddish, didn't pass the physical....I felt it through your words, and I guess it all means that your Father IS still here, in your prose, in your shiurim and your life.
Someone who came to a class of mine that was on my Fathers yortzeit, as I dedicated it, she said, "Reb Zalmen?" I got so excited, I asked her, "You knew my Father?" she said :"No, I listen to your tapes"....and i guess I talk about him always.
vehekitzu etc NOW
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