Parashat Emor
Caring for the Dead
Despite their
focus on life, priests are permitted to attend to their closest relatives in
death, emphasizing the importance of caring for the dead.
By Rabbi Jordan D. Cohen
The following article
is reprinted with permission from Kolel: The
Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish Learning.
Overview
This week's parashah begins with specific restrictions
directed at the kohanim, the priests.
These restrictions pertain to marriages, sexuality and mourning. Kohanim must
not come into contact with the dead, except for immediate blood relatives. They
are only allowed to marry certain partners, and some kinds of physical
abnormalities disqualify them from service. The food that the kohanim eat may not
be shared with "regular" Israelites. And, just as the sacrificial
offerings must be perfect, so too the priests themselves must be physically
unblemished.
In chapter 23, all of the "set times" or holy days
are listed and described, beginning with Shabbat and continuing with Pesach,
the Omer period, Shavuot, Rosh HaShanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkot. The portion
ends with a review of the laws pertaining to the menorah, the bread of the
altar, and the punishment for murder, maiming and blasphemy.
In Focus
The Eternal spoke to Moses: Speak to the kohanim, the sons
of Aaron, and say to them: None shall defile himself for any dead person among
this people. (Leviticus 21:1)
Pshat
Continuing from the previous week's instructions to the
priests, focusing on matters of holiness, parashat Emor commences with a
pronouncement that the kohanim are not to allow themselves to become tamei (ritually impure) through contact
with a corpse. This is a pretty common type of impurity, which the priests are
specifically warned against.
However, the passage continues with an exception: Priests can
(and, in fact, are obligated to) tend to their immediate blood relatives
(parents, children and siblings--spouses were added to this list by the later
sages) when they have died. While tending to the dead is an important
obligation for everyone, it does render one impure, and therefore unable to
participate in the ritual life of the community. While this may not be a huge
issue for most Israelites, especially when compared to the passing of a loved
one, for the priests, this means they are not able to fulfill their role as the
facilitators of worship.
Drash
One of my favorite modern commentators, Pinchas Peli (z"l) (may his memory be a blessing)
reminds us that back in Egypt, death was big business. All of life in ancient
Egypt, especially for the aristocracy, revolved around building one's
"house of eternity." This "house of eternity" referred to
both one's legacy in this world and one's place in the world to come. For many
Egyptian and other pagan priests, the preparation of tombs and the rituals of
the dead were their main preoccupation. Egyptian priests focused much more on
the dead then the living.
But not so for the Israelite priest. The koheyn’s duty is to
serve the living; to serve as a teacher and model of holiness for the people.
The priest is actually prohibited from even coming into contact with the dead.
Doing so makes him tamei (impure) and
therefore unable to fulfill his priestly responsibilities.
But this "impurity" is not transmitted from the
corpse. The Torah is not telling us that there is anything intrinsically dirty
or evil about a dead person. Death is, so to speak, a part of life. To
emphasize this point, the exemption is stated to allow the koheyn to take care
of the preparation and burial of those closest to him: parents, siblings and
children. This is, in fact, the obligation of every Jew.
The mitzvah,
commandment, of Livayat HaMet, the
accompanying of the dead to their final burial place, is considered one of the
most important of all the mitzvot. Why? Because it is considered to be the only
truly selfless act; it is the only "favor" you can do for another
without any expectation of the favor being returned. Helping another in their
transition from this world to the next is the supreme human obligation. It will
happen to us all, yet no one truly understands how this transition takes place.
We can only guess, and try our best to help.
So important is this act that no one, including the high
priest, can shirk this responsibility toward close relatives, or even towards
the lonely or poor (met mitzvah) who
have no one else to bury them. However, we must realize that it is not death
that defiles the priest and renders him incapable of tending to his duties.
Rather, it is the shifting of the focus of his duties from the living to the
dead that distracts the priest from his obligation to the living.
We respect and mourn our dead, but Judaism is primarily
about life. As it says in the Psalms, "The dead cannot mourn the
Eternal" (Psalm 115). Death is a part of life. Because of this respect for
life, taking care of the dead is considered such an important duty. We don't
abdicate the responsibility to priests or professional undertakers--we take
care of it ourselves. This is why the Chevra
Kaddisha (literally "holy fellowship"--the traditional Jewish
burial society) exists, to help us meet this need. We bring holiness into our
lives through our respect for life. Even after death, we continue to honor the
relationships of our life.
Rabbi Jordan D.
Cohen is Associate Director of KOLEL - The Adult Centre for Liberal Jewish
Learning, a dynamic and pluralistic Jewish adult educational institute in
Toronto, Canada. Prior to his return to his hometown of Toronto, Rabbi
Cohen served as Rabbi of the United Jewish Congregation of Hong Kong, and
Associate Rabbi of the North Shore Temple Emanuel in Sydney, Australia.
Numerous communities throughout the United States, Canada, Israel, Australia,
New Zealand, Japan and China can attest to Rabbi Cohen's engaging teaching
style and innovative programs.