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Cemetery Symbols Reveal Customs

Hebrew headstones are talking. As the Jewish New Year approaches, we have a good chance to listen — an opportunity, really, to honor lives lived and to deepen our understanding of Jewish time and place by visiting a Jewish cemetery.
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September 9, 2009

Hebrew headstones are talking. As the Jewish New Year approaches, we have a good chance to listen — an opportunity, really, to honor lives lived and to deepen our understanding of Jewish time and place by visiting a Jewish cemetery.

During the month of Elul, leading up to Rosh Hashanah, and during the Ten Days of Repentance between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are two times when it is customary for Jews to visit the cemetery.

For those who would like community support after Rosh Hashanah, there’s a kind of group occassion called Kever Avot, which literally means “graves of the fathers.” In many communities, a rabbi leads a service at the cemetery. We have just finished wishing each other “le-shanah tovah tikatevu” (“may you be inscribed [in the book of life] for a good year”) when we are off to visit the graves of parents, relatives or other loved ones.

The prayers of the Days of Awe are filled with imagery of who shall live and who shall die, which makes a visit to the cemetery during this period of self-examination — to touch base, so to speak, with the lives and influence of those who have gone before us — seem enlightening.

My family has found that a graveside visit is also an opportunity for our children to hear about and recall the good qualities and mitzvot of departed family members.

It’s a complex pull of tradition, respect, grief, honor and memory that draws us to the graveyard. What blocks our steps?

Clinking around in many of our heads, I suspect, is the perceived gloom of a musty graveyard visit complete with “Twilight Zone” flashbacks.

Let all that mumbo jumbo rest in peace. The thought behind a cemetery visit is to pay respect to friends and loved ones.

In the orderly rows of headstones or plaques, there is a whole world of Jewish essence chiseled perfectly. The problem is, many of us don’t know how to read it.

On recent visits to the cemetery, I began to notice the images and abbreviations carved into the headstones.

I remember puzzling over a lengthy abbreviation at the bottom of a headstone. What did it mean?

I began to look up this form of cemetery shorthand, born out of the necessities of limited writing space and its expense. Visit by visit, the stones began to speak.

At the top of many headstones I saw the abbreviation nyyp, which stands for po nikbar or po nikb’ra and means “here lies.”

On many headstones you may also see a single letter reish yyd, meaning “reb.” It’s a sign of respect, like Mr. It does not mean rabbi. On several women’s headstones I found a yym or yyrm, meaning Mrs., or Miss, a traditional Ashkenazic form of address for a woman.

Chiseled into many markers is the abbreviation l yy z — for zichrono or zichrono livrachah, meaning “may his or her soul be a blessing.”

At the bottom of many headstones and plaques is the abbreviation yh yb yx yn yt — for te’hi nafsho, or nafsha, tsarurah b’tsror ha’chayim, meaning “let his or her soul be bound up in the bonds of life.” It is a verse adapted from Samuel also found in El Molei Rachamin, the traditional memorial prayer recited at funerals.

The symbols on markers have always caught my eye, especially the hands. They motion semiotically for you to come closer to discover more about the person’s life.

An image of hands with fingers parted as if giving the priestly blessing means the person was a Kohen. A water pitcher designates a Levite. A women’s marker is sometimes inscribed with a candelabra, as lighting candles is a mitzvah performed by women.

Occasionally, in older cemeteries, you will see a marker in the shape of a tree stump, representing a young life cut short.

To decipher many other headstone abbreviations, let me suggest “A Field Guide to Visiting a Jewish Cemetery” by Rabbi Joshua Segal (Jewish Cemetery Publishing, LLC, 2005).

When it’s time to leave the grave, Jews have a custom of leaving behind a pebble. One interpretation is that leaving a stone dates to a time when the dead were buried beneath a pile of stones.

At an unveiling this year for my wife’s grandmother, the family matriarch Grace Hasson, Rabbi Sheldon Pennes explained that the word b’tsror in the phrase, “Let his soul be bound up in the bonds of the living,” is a play on the ancient Hebrew word tsror for “pebble” (see Amos 9:9).

The rabbi related that in ancient Israel, as a shepherd would use pebbles to count sheep, the leaving of a pebble could be a reminder of our desire that God, like a shepherd, count and care for our friends and mishpachah.

So when you visit, place a stone. All would agree that leaving one shows others that someone has visited and that a life has been remembered.

Edmon J. Rodman is a Los Angeles writer and designer who writes for Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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