Hi guys. So I'm doing SOR 2, and after getting back an essay on death + mourning in judaism (got 14/20 that I was disappointed with), i rewrote it to see if i could improve my mark. The feedback I received was that my mark would remain the same regardless of anything that I improved on it, because I had an issue with sustaining my argument. I'm rather disheartened because the feed back is ambiguous on exactly how I'm meant to do so (and so I'm sort of left in the dark and trying to figure out where to go from here ahh). I wondering if you guys could spot what's exactly happening and how I'm meant to approach this issue? Here's just the intro and one of the weaker body paragraphs.
“...Therefore I command you, You shall open wide your hand to your brother, to the needy and to the poor, in the land.” Deuteronomy 15:11
With reference to the quotation, analyse how ONE significant practice gives depth and meaning to the life of the individual AND the Jewish community.
Death and mourning is a highly ritualised significant practice within the Jewish faith. It is through the upkeep of the commandment- “you shall open your hand to your brother..” (Deut 15:13) for the maintenance of the covenantal relationship between God and his people that the main purposes of this significant rite are fulfilled. That is - to show respect for the dead (kavod ha-met) and to comfort the living (nihum avelim). As a result, the importance and meaning is highlighted in the individual’s life, while the community questions their own mortality, and reaffirms their faith in the expression of spiritual life after death. Hence, depth and meaning is given to lives of the individual and the Jewish community.
In Judaism, adherents belief in dead bodies as a source of ritual impurity is reflected in pre-burial practices as “He that touches the dead body of any man shall be unclean” (Numbers 19:11). Whilst the mourning family are preparing for the the burial, and the body is present, people that have been in the presence of the body must wash their hands before entering another home. This is done symbolically to remove spiritual impurity, even if the individual has not made physical contact with the body. Furthermore, the shomerim and/or the family members ritually cleansing the body before burial (Tahara/ purification) serves to fulfill the same purpose as it symbolises the transformation of status of the body that was created in the image of God, the water of the Tahara readying it for the next stage of making physical return to “the land” (Deut 13:11). Such practices serving to carry to carry out a core Jewish belief allows both the mourning individual and community to upkeep the commandment and the covenantal relationship between God and his people. Thus, meaning is created through the maintenance of Jewish traditions.