Judaism
- PMID: 37851231
- DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-29923-0_17
Judaism
Abstract
Judaism offers a rich body of traditional beliefs and practices surrounding end-of-life, death, mourning, and the afterlife. A more detailed understanding of these topics might prove helpful to clinicians seeking guidance for how best to care for Jewish patients, to anyone supporting dying individuals, or to anyone interested in learning more about the subject. The objectives of this chapter are to examine Jewish approaches to key bioethical issues surrounding palliative care, to analyze meaning-making rituals following a loss, at a funeral, and throughout mourning, and to explore Jewish beliefs in an afterlife. Research was collected from sacred texts, legal codes, modern rabbinic responsa literature, and secondary sources. Core, guiding principles include human beings' creation "in the image of God," an obligation to save life, an obligation to mitigate pain, a prohibition against self-harm and hastening death, respect for the dead, and ritualized mourning periods ("shiva," "shloshim," and "shanah"), which feature special liturgy ("kaddish") and practices. Judaism is a religion that values thorough questioning, debate, and argumentation. It also encompasses diverse cultural and ethnic backgrounds, and various denominations. Many Jews are also unaffiliated with a movement or rarely engage with traditional law altogether. For all of these reasons, no summary can comprehensively encapsulate the wide range of opinions that exist around any given topic. That said, what follows is a detailed overview of traditional Jewish approaches to artificial nutrition/hydration, extubation, dialysis, euthanasia and more. It also outlines rituals surrounding and following death. Finally, views and beliefs of the afterlife are presented, as they often serve to imbue meaning and comfort in times of grief, uncertainty, and transition.
Keywords: Aid in dying; Artificial nutrition; Bioethic; DNR order; Death; Dialysis; Dying; End-of-life; Euthanasia; Funeral; Jewish; Judaism; Mouring; Organ donation; Palliative extubation; Religion; Sedation; Shiva; Terminal Illness.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
References
Suggested Reading
Books
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- A time to mourn, a time to comfort by Dr. Ron Wolfson, LongHill Partners, Inc (2005)
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- Weiner RJ (2017) Jewish guide to practical medical decision-making. Urim Publications
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- Saying Kaddish: How to comfort the dying, bury the dead, and mourn as a jew by Anita Diamant, copyright © 1998 by Anita Diamant. Used by permission of Schocken Books, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved
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- The Jewish way in death and mourning by Rabbi Maurice Lamm, copyright 1969, 2000 by arrangement with Jonathan David Publishers, Inc. www.jdbooks.com
Articles
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- Reisner RA. A halakhic ethic of care for the terminally Ill
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- Dorff RE. A Jewish approach to end-stage medical care
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- Kalmanofsky RJ. Alternative kevura methods
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- Dorff RE. Assisted suicide/aid in dying reconsidered
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- Cynthia X, Pan MD, FACP, AGSF et al (2020) Can Orthodox Jewish patients undergo palliative extubation? a challenging ethics case study. J Pain Symptom Manag 60(6):1263
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