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I have heard, unless I’m mistaken, that the grave of a person who committed suicide is marked-off or enclosed from other graves in a Jewish cemetary. If this is true, why is this so?
Interesting!, I didn’t know that before!, does the CCC has anything on that?It was thought suicide victims go to hell without questioning.
Interesting analysis…http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon14.gifFor example, it denies the power of God, His forgiveness (if it is done for reasons of guilt) and His grace. It violates nature, which abhors the thought of pain and death instinctively. It denies in essense what Christ accomplished for us on the Cross.
I have never heard this about Jewish cemeteries, but I don’t know much about them. I’ve only been in a Jewish cemetery once, and I didn’t notice any marked-off or enclosed graves, but, then again, I was hardly exploring, and was just there for a burial of an elderly neighbor who was like a third grandfather to me.I have heard, unless I’m mistaken, that the grave of a person who committed suicide is marked-off or enclosed from other graves in a Jewish cemetary. If this is true, why is this so?
Yes, I remember this was discussed in the film Kingdom of Heaven but I’ve never read about it before, so I’m not sure how prevalent this idea was, but it’s disappointing that people thought that way.This happened in Christian (including Catholic) gravesites. I know the reason why Christian cemeteries did this to suicide victims is because it was thought suicide was a sin. The unforgivable sin, since you can’t repent for it, since you’re dead. It was thought suicide victims go to hell without questioning.
But as why this happens in Jewish gravesites in beyond me.
Thank-you, Alltheroses. I think that this is the custom of only traditional Jewish cemeteries. But I’m dubious that ritual purity would have to do with it, as any death is ritually impure. I’m not sure that atonement has to do with it either, because sin and atonement as it’s been explained to me is rather different in Judaism, and the situation might be just as problematic for a murderer.I have never heard this about Jewish cemeteries, but I don’t know much about them. I’ve only been in a Jewish cemetery once, and I didn’t notice any marked-off or enclosed graves, but, then again, I was hardly exploring, and was just there for a burial of an elderly neighbor who was like a third grandfather to me.
I know that, in Christianity, suicides are often not allowed to be buried in hallowed ground, because killing yourself is a violation of the Commandment against murder which the suicide will not have the opportunity to repent, and I suppose that Jewish people also might perceive suicide as a violation of the Commandment against murder that the suicide wouldn’t have a chance to atone for. Perhaps, on a related note, they feel like a suicide is somehow unclean, and that it would profane the cemetery. I think, in Judaism, there is a big focus on ritual cleanliness and uncleanliness, and it wouldn’t surprise me if that was involved in their burial rites as well. This, of course, is all speculation, and I’m not even sure that Jewish cemeteries do separate suicides.
Very. This idea is still very common. I did a poll called “Is suicide a sin?” Yes was the majority, no was the minority. Only God knows (my position) was in between.Yes, I remember this was discussed in the film Kingdom of Heaven but I’ve never read about it before, so I’m not sure how prevalent this idea was, but it’s disappointing that people thought that way.
An excellent idea. But Purgatory is an exclusively Catholic doctrine and thus Non-Catholic Christians wouldn’t be able to believe suicide victims go to Purgatory, because they don’t believe in Purgatory in the first place. Another reason is because suicide is considered a form of breaking “thou shalt not kill” for that Christians believe it’s a sin.But what about the purgatory, why not assuming that those people who committed suicide would spend much time in purgatory!, why we judged on them that they will go to hell without questioning !!!
There’s a bit of a bottled apologetic on suicide at the following linkDoes the CCC has anything on suicide in Catholicism?
Yes, it does:Does the CCC has anything on suicide in Catholicism?
Suicide
2280 Everyone is responsible for his life before God who has given it to him.
It is God who remains the sovereign Master of life.
We are obliged to accept life gratefully and preserve it for his honor and the salvation of our souls.
We are stewards, not owners, of the life God has entrusted to us.
It is not ours to dispose of.
2281 Suicide contradicts the natural inclination of the human being to preserve and perpetuate his life.
It is gravely contrary to the just love of self.
It likewise offends love of neighbor because it unjustly breaks the ties of solidarity with family, nation, and other human societies to which we continue to have obligations.
Suicide is contrary to love for the living God.
2282 If suicide is committed with the intention of setting an example, especially to the young, it also takes on the gravity of scandal.
Voluntary co-operation in suicide is contrary to the moral law.
Grave psychological disturbances, anguish, or grave fear of hardship, suffering, or torture can diminish the responsibility of the one committing suicide.
It comes under “Respect for Human Life”, regarding the 5th commandment: vatican.va/archive/ENG0015/__P7Z.HTM2283 We should not despair of the eternal salvation of persons who have taken their own lives. By ways known to him alone, God can provide the opportunity for salutary repentance. the Church prays for persons who have taken their own lives.
I’m the one who put the post there, and **in this particular case **I think it was part of his purgatory. What form it generally takes we just don’t know. That there was something there was not in doubt - the young bloke who told me the place was “haunted” said that one night when he was cleaning the store, all the stock just jumped off one complete set of shelves, and landed on the floor. He didn’t like being there at night.This is reference to member Bob Crowley post above. Do you believe committing a suicide would lead the person to be a Ghost trapped in this earth as part of that person punishment (aka part of purgatory)?
That’s a good question and from what I read, it is considered (or was considered, due to the state of mind of the person) a criminal act to take one’s life. However, when you read the book of Tobias, he is asking God to receive his soul, or to take back the life that God gave. There is such a difference between taking one’s life and giving one’s life back to God. The passage on taking a life, I think, is in the passage with Noah, “6 “Whoever sheds human blood,by humans shall their blood be shed;for in the image of God has God made mankind.” and also relates to this passage, “I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil”…the Psalm indicates that God is author/and creator of all things and that His Spirit in within us.I have heard, unless I’m mistaken, that the grave of a person who committed suicide is marked-off or enclosed from other graves in a Jewish cemetary. If this is true, why is this so?
We do not bury one who has committed suicide in a cemetery together with other Jews; instead he or she is buried in an area of the cemetery removed from all others. Nor do we sit shivah for such a person.
The rule is that we do not bury a Rasha (wicked person) together with everyone else, or sit Shivah for him/her. However, under normal circumstances we never assume that a person is a Rasha, because even if we are certain that this person was guilty of many heinous sins, the possibility (or probability) exists that the person repented before passing away. After all, it only takes a single virtuous thought to do Teshuvah (repentance) and be transformed from a Rasha into a Tzaddik (righteous person).
A person who commits suicide, on the other hand, is defying G-d until the very last moment. G-d placed every person onto this world with a mission and a purpose, and completing this goal in the years which G-d has allotted is ultimately in the person’s best interest. Suicide is saying that the life that G-d has given isn’t worth living.
If, however, the person who committed suicide did not die instantly, we assume that the person repented in the last moments of life and we bury him/her in the cemetery and the relatives do sit shivah.
The strict law also does not apply if the suicide is a result of a mental or emotional illness (which is the case in the vast majority of suicides). In fact, there are those Halachic authorities that hold that as long as no one actually saw the person committing suicide in cold blood, we assume that the person had a nervous breakdown, and was therefore not responsible for his/her actions.
Therefore, although the law states that one does not bury a person who has committed suicide in the cemetery, and we also don’t sit shivah for this person, practically speaking it is very rare to find a case which conforms with the abovementioned stipulations.
Good question? Again, reading about this: There is also a deep spiritual consequence to suicide.Thanks TypesAndShadows for the answer and link http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon14.gif.
However, do you believe committing a suicide would lead the person to be a Ghost trapped in this earth as part of that person punishment (aka part of purgatory)?
http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon14.gif An excellent link, thank you “MorningSong51”, however, if that view by Rabbi “Shraga Simmons” is shared by a Catholic Priest then it would explain the mystery of Ghosts and hunted homes we hear from time to time. http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon3.gifWhen a person commits suicide, the soul has nowhere to go. It cannot return to the body, because the body is destroyed. And it is not let in to any of the soul worlds, because its time has not come. This state of limbo is very painful. A person may commit suicide because he wants to escape, but in reality he is getting a far worse situation.
I read Rabbi Simmons’s commentaries on Aish.com from time to time, he always has good insights: aish.com/ci/sam/48936292.html and aish.com/authors/48865357.htmlhttp://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon14.gif An excellent link, thank you “MorningSong51”, however, if that view by Rabbi “Shraga Simmons” is shared by a Catholic Priest then it would explain the mystery of Ghosts and hunted homes we hear from time to time. http://forums.catholic-questions.org/images/icons/icon3.gif
Meaning in life, however, is not determined by democracy. It is invested in us by G-d. Each of us (meaning you, me, anyone else we may be thinking of) is created in G-d’s image. G-d planted in each of us a unique potential to overcome exactly the combination of tests we alone are confronted with. Life, the Torah teaches, is all about meeting our own challenges. That is the true Jewish definition of success.
We are often challenged with pain, depression, disappointment and feelings of emptiness. It is how we battle these exclusive challenges that makes each of us uniquely who we are. Being rich or healthy or famous is not much of a test; it’s more like a lollypop. Greatness comes from facing challenges; not from the spoils of success.
The very things that may make a person depressed are, in fact, the very challenges that can give our lives real meaning. And this is the kind of real meaning the Jewish People have always been about (look at history).
I have a favorite verse that I read awhile back and in some way could apply to this topic discussion. The reason being, is that we really don’t know what’s behind everything that comes in and goes out of our lives - being good or bad. So the verse states, "Plus, we don’t own our bodies, Judaism teaches. They belong to G-d. At the end of our lives it is G-d Who takes them back.