Jewish Life Digital Edition April 2015 | Page 62

FEATURE Embracing Judaism’s belief in the resurrection of the dead I BY ILAN HERMANN YOU DON’T NEED TO BE IN THIS WORLD TOO LONG to know that life is not forever. From the vivid portrayal of fatal loss on our media screens and in the literature, to the firsthand experience of losing someone. We are reminded of our mortality ever so frequently. And yet, when such happens, G-d forbid, closer to home, it is shattering, devastating and traumatising. Why? If death is a part of the design and if we are aware that it is indivisible with the package deal of life and an unalterable reality, why then do we struggle so profoundly to digest death and loss, carrying scars and pain in its wake? In a twist from the more common response and explanation, the mystics explain that we carry a trace of the ‘Garden Of Eden’ syndrome within us. In that hallowed, untainted and pure environment, there was no death. Death was introduced into the picture only after indulgence in the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, say our Sages. So the idea goes that we harbour deep within us, on an unconscious level, the intuition that death should not be. After all, this is G-d’s world and G-d is altogether good and G-d is life, so how can the phenomenon of death and THE MYSTICS EXPLAIN THAT WE CARRY A TRACE OF THE ‘GARDEN OF EDEN’ SYNDROME WITHIN US… WE HARBOUR DEEP WITHIN US, ON AN UNCONSCIOUS LEVEL, THE INTUITION THAT DEATH SHOULD NOT BE. AFTER ALL, THIS IS G-D’S WORLD AND G-D IS ALTOGETHER GOOD AND G-D IS LIFE. 58 JEWISH LIFE ■ ISSUE 83 loss exist within this Divine backdrop? The thought goes one step further: that the proof that this is the case, that the natural order inherent within creation is one where death is not a part of it, is in the fact that when the process of creation finally reaches its goal – the end conclusion – at that time, existence will revert to its ideal state, one in which death will again be vanquished. More so, at that time, the reversal will take place whereby all ‘those that lie in the dust shall awaken to eternal life’, resurrected, in the great miracle called Techiyat Hameitim, revival of those who have passed on. This concept of the resurrection is one that is often overlooked and understated, and yet it is as much a part of Jewish thought as any other. It is listed as one of the 13 principles that underpin the Jewish belief system, according to Maimonides, a Sage revered and accepted by all. Within the intimate passages of Torah study, the Talmud, the classic and epic stories and encounters of our Sages, the subject of the miraculous, including that of the resurrection, is far more readily digestible and is layered with a depth of understanding. But, for the average person, the notion of the resurrection is audacious and ludicrously farfetched. It is the talk of tales and legends, most would say, but not based in reality. So I undertook, as part of a reality check project, to find substance, a precedent perhaps, for the miracle of rebirth. My conclusion was that it is far less heavenly and otherworldly than one might expect. It was actually so common, so tangible and vivid, so clear and evident so as to be overlooked! Let me explain. Essentially, the study revolved around analysing life, its birth and the strata of our human physiology and that of the world around us. I postulated that if it could be shown that life is a phenomenon that is astonishing and displays evidence of a Higher Power, a Creator, then a PHOTOGRAPH: BRIAN CHATKIN Arise,AWAKEN