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Conference taveng::bagels

Title:BAGELS and other things of Jewish interest
Notice:1.0 policy, 280.0 directory, 32.0 registration
Moderator:SMURF::FENSTER
Created:Mon Feb 03 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1524
Total number of notes:18709

959.0. "Cremation vs. Burial" by FOLK::HASS (Barry Hass BXB1-1/F11 293-5384) Thu Jul 05 1990 21:09

What does Jewish law or custom have to say about cremation, as opposed to
burial, of a deceased person?

I had always thought that cremation was forbidden. But recently, when my wife's
uncle died, he was cremated, and a rabbi conducted the service where his ashes
were scattered.
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959.1R"LGAON::jemAnacronym: an outdated acronymThu Jul 05 1990 22:2513
>What does Jewish law or custom have to say about cremation, as opposed to
>burial, of a deceased person?

Absolutely forbidden.

> But recently, when my wife's
>uncle died, he was cremated, and a rabbi conducted the service where his ashes
>were scattered.

Stranger things are done in the name of Judaism (see note 957).

Jem
959.2By whom? FOLK::HASSBarry Hass BXB1-1/F11 293-5384Fri Jul 06 1990 17:1817
Jem,

Thanks for the reply.

>What does Jewish law or custom have to say about cremation, as opposed to
>burial, of a deceased person?

>> Absolutely forbidden.

I don't doubt the accuracy of your reply, but I was hoping for a bit more
information.

Is it forbidden explicitly by a commandment? If not, then what is the derivation
of the prohibition?

Also, at the risk of demonstrating inexcusable ignorance, I have to admit that
the title of your reply (R"L) was lost on me. Can you fill me in?
959.3GAON::jemAnacronym: an outdated acronymMon Jul 09 1990 18:0126
Re: .2

>I don't doubt the accuracy of your reply, but I was hoping for a bit more
>information.
>
>Is it forbidden explicitly by a commandment? If not, then what is the derivation
>of the prohibition?


According to Ramban (Nachmanides), the verse, "you are dust, and to dust
shall you return" (Gen. 3:19), is the biblical injunction to be buried
unchanged in the ground. Rambam (Maimonides) includes burying the dead
within 24 hours as one of the 613 commandments (Sefer Hamitzvot, asseh 
231), from the verse, "you must bury it on the same day" (Deut. 21:23),
although the context refers to an executed criminal (i.e., *even* a
perpetrator of a capital crime deserves basic respect for his remains).

>Also, at the risk of demonstrating inexcusable ignorance, I have to admit that
>the title of your reply (R"L) was lost on me. Can you fill me in?

Not your ignorance, my insensitivity. "Rachmana Le'tzelan" literally means,
"may the Merciful One save us" (from such situations, and from those who
pervert time-honored Jewish traditions).

Jem