The burial ceremony.

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At the moment of creation of man the Almighty announced “Let us make man on our image and likeness.” This plural form (Let “us” make…) implies that God was speaking to another entity, and was object of multiple and profound interpretations. One of them says that the Creator addressed the Earth, inviting the earth, so to speak , to create man. The Creator provides the divine soul and the earth the body. The human body, indeed, is mad of earth, atoms. When death occurs, each element returns to its source of origin. The soul goes back to its celestial dimension and the body is reunified with the Earth…”Because you are made of dust of the earth and you shall return to dust of the earth”. The soul arrives by its own means to its heavenly soul, but the body has to be taken by the family members to its final resting place, inside the earth.

Once the people arrive to the gravesite the cemetery employes place the body to be downloaded into the grave. There is a mechanic switch to lower the body, that switch is activated by the officiant or by one of the family members.

Once the body is lowered to the ground, the children begin to shovel earth. First, the sons, three times each. Our custom is to stick the shovel into the ground after the third time, without handing it to somebody else. In our community, we allow women to take part in this ritual. They either pour some earth from the land of Israel, which is specially brought for them, or they take a fist of earth from the gravesite and throw it into it, three times.

After the coffin is covered with one layer of earth, and while people still shovel earth into the gravesite, we do the qeri’a.

Before we explain the qeri’a let me clarify that it is absolutely permitted to allow the gentile workers to shovel earth into the grave, by hand or by the means of a machine. In our community, most families cover the first layer of the coffin by themselves and then allow the workers to finish the job. Other families, prefer to cover the entire gravesite by themselves. In any case, this should not be a reason for machloqet, because there is not prohibition involved and every family should be allowed to decide in this matter. Except if it is Friday or the eve of a holiday, when it must be done only what is required.