[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

EVERYTHING IS ELECTRIFYING! Volcanic Eruptions and Stormquakes Strike as Solar Activity EXPLODES

Why Some LA Biz Owners Want To Leave Because Of The Riots, But Can't

As conflict with Iran escalates, hundreds of Israelis quietly flee by yacht to Europe

Inside the clashes between Trump and Gabbard

Joe Rogan Reacts to Senator Hawley Wrecking CEO

Brave New World Order: Digital Oligarchs And The Rise Of The Algorithmic Leviathan

Iran's ruling clerics have 48 hours to save themselves from US military onslaught,

JP Morgan CEO says Americans need to stockpile guns and ammo

General Wesley Clark "Seven Countries in Five Years" [

Worlds first 6G electronic warfare weapon by China can jam F-35 radar in seconds

Electric vehicles collect huge amounts of data including psychological, genetic and health information

White fibrous clots found in 3-year-old child born to mother who was covid vaccinated while pregnant

​​​​​​​Strait Of Hormuz Disruption Fears Surge After Former Iranian Minister Threatens Transit Restrictions

PauL Joseph Watson: The Biggest Cover-Up Ever

Are we ignoring global seismic warnings?

Gold vs The Dollar: The Death Of Fiat In One Chart

Is 4um mail Tango-Uniform (tits-up)?

Kash Patel EXPOSES Van Hollen’s Hidden Agenda—Congress Erupts!

BREAKING: Trump says US has complete control over Iranian skies

Iran issues urgent warning to Israelis: Leave Haifa and Tel Aviv

Senate Version Of 'Big Beautiful Bill' Sets Up Showdown With House Over Taxes, Medicaid And SALT

War Powers Resolutions Introduced In Congress To Prevent US War With Iran

#BREAKING: DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has been rushed to the hospital in DC

Iran says parliament is preparing bill to leave nuclear non-proliferation treaty

Asia Moves Forward to Ditch Dollar: 50% Crash by 2030 Expected?

An Israeli missile interceptor has malfunctioned and crashed in Tel Aviv, according to initial reports.

SIXTY-PERCENT (60%) of ALL Israeli Fuel Supply - OFFLINE

Tucker and Steve Bannon React to New Developments in Iran-Israel Conflict

Russian and Chinese Military Cargo Planes Shuttling weapons, Missiles, Supplies into Iran

Mossad's reach inside Iran exposed as Tehran arrests 28 alleged agents


Religion
See other Religion Articles

Title: Canadians find unique burial solution for the intermarried
Source: The Jerusalem Post
URL Source: http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satell ... cle/ShowFull&cid=1125195664798
Published: Aug 28, 2005
Author: Bram Eisenthal
Post Date: 2005-08-29 13:21:29 by Bayonne
Keywords: intermarried, Canadians, solution
Views: 91
Comments: 1

On a patch of green land in this Canadian province, a wrought-iron gate stood at the entrance to a new cemetery, the words "Dedicated to the partnership of love and faith" inscribed on its doorway.
The Cemeteries, as the burial ground was known, was the brainchild of Noel Sandomirsky, a federal court judge, lifelong member of the 100-year old Beth Jacob Synagogue and chairman of its chevra kadisha, or burial society.

What set the two-month-old burial ground apart was its purpose: The Cemeteries was meant for Jews wishing to be buried next to their non-Jewish partners, something not ordinarily allowed under Jewish law [based on race- converts not allowed to be buried with spouse-Bayonne].

Sandomirsky, 63, is married to a convert. Beth Jacob's spiritual leader of eight years, the yet-to-be ordained Jeremy Parnes, also had a non-Jewish partner. In fact, most of the 700 Jews remaining in the once-thriving community of Regina — roughly 400 of whom belong to the unaffiliated but largely Conservative Beth Jacob — were tolerant of interfaith relationships.

Sandomirsky recalled a vibrant, healthy Jewish population in the Regina of his youth. Many young Jews met and married through the B'nai Brith Youth Organization.

Now, however, there were only about 15 children in the community who will have attended Beth Jacob's Hebrew school this year.

"I realized some time ago that the sphere of assimilation and how we deal with that, historically, involved religions that tend to excommunicate those who fall in love outside their faith," Sandomirsky said. "That's a high price to pay for falling in love. We should encourage these people to stay within the faith, creating a counterbalance to assimilation and the danger of losing people."

Sandomirsky decided to apply this concept to death as well. He looked into halacha, or Jewish religious law, and sought out the possibilities for such an arrangement. The Cemeteries were the result.

The Cemeteries was separate from other Jewish burial grounds on the property, using greenery, trees, shrubs and a large entrance gate to cut it off from the main area. There are 42 plots in three rows of 14 each, enough to last the community for quite some time.

The odd-numbered gravesites were reserved for Jewish members of the synagogue, while the even-numbered ones for non-Jews. Between each of the rows was a steel post laid into a cement block. A small, stainless-steel link chain was inserted between each post, creating an 18-inch high barrier.

That's not too high to impede visitors wishing to pay their respects to the deceased couple, but does create the necessary barrier required by Jewish law, Sandomirsky said. To the judge in him, it appeared to be a fair and appropriate solution.

"After a lifetime together, the couple should have the privilege — indeed, the right — of being buried side by side," he said.

Rabbi Alan Bright, spiritual leader of the Conservative Congregation Shaare Zedek of Montreal, said the concept sounds acceptable to him.

"I have no problem with the theory, as long as there is a barrier and it does not have to obscure the view," Bright said. "As long as there is a barrier, burying a Jew next to a non-Jew is permissible according to halacha."

In small European Jewish communities, he says, the situation of Jews wanting to be buried in close proximity to non-Jews arose all the time.

In the Montreal suburb of Beaconsfield, he notes, "we have a row of trees that acts as a natural barrier between the Jewish and non-Jewish portions of the cemetery there."

Sandomirsky says that some older and more traditional members of the community objected when the idea was first proposed, but their concerns were assuaged through dialogue.

"When the rubber hit the pavement this past summer, there was no opposition at all," he said.

So far, the idea has proved popular.

"We've already had three couples purchase plots in the first two months of operation. And I've also had inquiries from Saskatoon, Moose Jaw, Jeremy" — all in the province of Saskatchewan — and Winnipeg in Manitoba, Sandomirsky said.

He added that he was not aware of similar arrangements elsewhere.

"I have visited a number of cemeteries over the years and I have never come upon anything like this," Sandomirsky said. "I didn't base the idea on an existing place" — just on the idea of eternal love.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: All (#0)

The Cemeteries was meant for Jews wishing to be buried next to their non-Jewish partners, something not ordinarily allowed under Jewish law

Even in 2005, the Jews have many laws which are discriminatory. While they push for Egalitarianism in the US.

Why is it anti-semitic to recognize the counterproductive nature of an alliance with Israel that emboldens them to recklessly oppress Palestinians? Why is it anti-semitic to criticize the spending of US taxpayer money to shore up a garrison state which commenced its existence by "displacing" Palestinians, to the Chagrin of Arabs who are thereby motivated to attack U.S. citizens?

'Because it is.' -Goldi-Lox

Bayonne  posted on  2005-08-29   13:39:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]