• OR SUMMER SKIN AVA FROM ISRAE ral approach to eauty care regimen f rom the Dead Sea. Ahava Hand (I Foot Creams TUBE $ 1499 TUBES $ 3599 AppleTree SAYING GOODBYE Cover Story from page 29 it and if you don't why don't you be a gentle process — learning know?' They want to know about that death is simply the end of souls and spirits and life after living, an end we all reach one Often, children dealing with death write their fears death. They want to know 'if day; or it can be part of a more and concerns, then discuss these in a meeting with Ira Grandma is really watching me personal experience, such as Kaufman Chapel's David Techner. This is a compila- right no like my mom says.'" learning that a grandmother is tion of comments he received from children: Techner tells the children that dying. • I'm scared of when my Mommy dies. his idea of the afterlife is remem- Very few children will ask for I'm scared of tigers. bering the lost. great details about the afterlife, • What does heaven look like? "I meet a boy named Jared, and Rabbi Loss says. They're not • I'm afraid that when my parents die when I see him the next week I looking for whether God sits I won't have a family any more say, 'Hi Jared!' I know Jared by on a dark-blue chair in front of • I'm worried that I won't be able how he looks; that's the 'who' of a mahogany table. They are to breathe when I'm buried. him. likely to ask, "What happens • What will happen to my soul when I die? "What we do when we bury when I die?" • How do I know my soul will really go to heaven? someone is bury the 'who' of him. "Answer them by telling Many children also like to leave notes in the coffins The spirit or soul is the 'what' of them what you [the parent] of loved ones. Below is a recent letter, reproduced here someone — what did that person believe," Rabbi Loss says. You as written, placed with a much-loved grandfather: mean to us, and that 'what' stays may also want to look at some • • • • with us, even though we can't books together, then talk about keep the physical." them. Children also want to know Don't resort to ridiculous Deotr 6reidpot: what heaven looks like (they often cliches that might sound good picture heaven as a place, "like lope yo tA 3o i-o keewevx 'AAA at the outset but, on reflection, West Bloomfield in the clouds," prove to be profoundly shallow - Techner says), if-they will be with see 001 OP yowl- , felifives — not to mention perplexing GOd when they die, and does to children. Judaism offer the specifics of fried otAd, yaw, meylitAo kot. "Whatever you do, don't say, death that other religions — with `Grandma was so good that their elaborate descriptions of gill yoci, please levovi-d\ over me God loved her so much He winged cherubs and endless ban- took her,'" Rabbi Loss says. A quets — do? etvidt all 'OP vAy - P;Atmily otAd some- young child's likely next With death, Techner says, "faith thought will be, "Wow, I better becomes challenged, it becomes Joky I will 3o tkp not be good, or I'll die." keowevk akvtd real. Like David Techner, Rabbi "We really have a tremendously 1-ken I will.)e wi+-k yoLA Poyevey. Loss advocates parents includ- rich tradition. We teach children ing their children as much as that we're here for a reason, for a miss yotk so miAck otAel I love yoLk possible in death's ceremonies certain time, and that there is — the funeral, the service — if something beyond the grave, wif-k 001 o tA,Ay keevri- -P-oyevey. they so chose. "But before you another existence. bring them, let them know that "Whether this [death] happens I love yotA, Mom and Dad might be crying, when they're 4 or 14 may be the but everything is OK. first time they are actually looking "If the child does want to Retckel at, examining, questioning their come to the funeral, I encourage faith. It becomes a very important (wko is eme o4 y olk, ,Trotdchild,v-ev) parents to bring a guardian, a time in their lives, their first good friend, along to help watch opportunity to look at 'Who am I the child. Often children, even talking, we're involving kids in the and what do I believe?' They learn that very young ones, will participate for a process, and that's a lot better than hav- we have a pretty good belief system, a long time, but you don't want the parent ing a child see his grandparent taken in comforting belief system." worrying so much about how the child an ambulance to the hospital, then he Rabbi Harold Loss of Temple Israel in is doing that he misses the funeral." never comes back. It's like he just disap- West Bloomfield says there are no At the funeral, the family will stand peared." across-the-board answers to give to chil- together. The rabbi will speak. It will These boys and girls, the un-included, inevitably be a time of sadness. And dren when it comes to the spiritual side grow up. Now they're the parents and of death. Each child's understanding of while Judaism has no pat answers about they want to speak openly with their death will be as individual as he or she the afterlife, some of the final words a children. Rabbi Loss' first advice: "You is. family hears as their loved one is laid to know your child. Respond to his ques- A child's approach will be "based on rest offer that most priceless commodity: tions with answers you think he can what he has seen in life, what's going on hope. Hope for life everlasting, hope for handle." at the time, what he has experienced, being reunited with God. Rabbi Loss further counsels parents what he's like. You just can't generalize "Death is a process of life; its natural," that "every death is sad, but not every when it comes to how a child will Rabbi Loss says. "That is why at a funer- death is tragic." Most deaths do not respond." al we say that we return the body to involve violence or come about after a "When I grew up, children were not Earth, dust to dust. But the spark of sudden catastrophe, and so in many involved" in any aspect of death, Rabbi God that's within each of us — that will Loss says. "It was frightening. Now we're families death is part of a process. It can return to God." ❑ •. • Ahava Advanced Moisturizer Ahava Nourishing Night Cream •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • If Only Moses Knew...' 2 EASY WAYS TO ORDER ONLINE: www.jewish.COM BY PHONE: 800-875-6621 JEW1SH.COM ALSO OFFERS J14 •Banner ads & newsletter sponsorships, Web site hosting & -design services 6/18 For more information, call 248-354-6060 2004 or e-mail us at sales@jewish.com . 30 • •: • .• • • •• .-... • • . • • . . • P'aCs 4,4••• 1