Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Disposing of sacred objects
How faiths deal with worn-out scriptures
KEN GIGLIOTTI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Enlarge Image
Dozens, perhaps hundreds, of boxes of books and papers will be placed in a large grave about three metres square.
Instead of burying their noses in their textbooks, teacher Ruth Ashrafi is asking her students to bury the books.
Of course, there's a catch: The only books to be laid to rest are those that are damaged and contain the Hebrew name of God, explains the director of Judaic studies at Gray Academy.
Related Items
"We want our students to have this tradition so they continue their awareness," says Ashrafi of why she involves students in the ritual book burial. "These books symbolize these values, which we hold so dear."
Ashrafi and high school students from Gray Academy plan to show that respect when they bring boxes of books and paper to a Jewish community book burial, scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 20, at Bnay Abraham Cemetery on north Main Street.
Dozens, perhaps hundreds, of boxes of books and papers, as well as worn-out prayer shawls and phylacteries will be placed in a large grave about three metres square, says Rena Boroditsky, executive director of Chesed Shel Emes, the Jewish burial society co-ordinating the event. The burial also includes photocopies and pages downloaded from the Internet.
In the past, synagogues kept worn-out books and papers in a Geniza, a dedicated storage room or container. Boroditsky says the burial society is offering the ritual book burial, last held 16 months ago, as a free service to the Jewish community.
Jews are instructed by religious law dating back 2,000 years not to destroy books and papers that contain the name of God, explains Rabbi Alan Green of Shaarey Zedek Synagogue, who will conduct the graveside ceremony. He says that instruction is specific to the name of God written in Hebrew, and not to English or other languages.
"They give us meaning and direction to our lives that we otherwise wouldn't actualize," says Green of the value of books to the Jewish community. "We show them respect when they can no longer be used."
That direction for proper disposal means Boroditsky and her flock of volunteers have been sorting through boxes of books and papers, some musty and water-damaged, in an attempt to divert what is still usable from what isn't. They also remove anything metal, which doesn't decompose.
She says members of the community are still welcome to bring their old books and papers to the Chesed Shel Emes office at Main and Manitoba.
In various Christian traditions, the disposal of holy objects and worn-out Bibles is not as clearly laid out, says Rev. Richard Soo, chancellor of the Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Winnipeg.
Although Christians view the Bible as a holy book, it is not the actual physical pages and covers that are sacred, Soo says.
"For us, it's not the actual document. With the Bible it isn't the material as much as the actual word of God that is spiritual," he says.
Most Catholic churches would have a sink that drains directly into the ground for disposing of holy water, says Soo. Other blessed objects or consecrated items such as chalices and vestments, are returned to the ground so they can return to the natural elements, Soo adds.
The organization that places 500,000 Bibles each year in the country's hotels, hospitals and prisons attempts to recycle used scriptures to other Christian mission agencies as much as possible, says Gordon Balfour of the Gideons International in Canada.
He says Bibles are replaced in hotel rooms about every six years, and ones that are damaged or defaced are burned by a professional disposal agency.
"While we consider the contents to be significant, we don't consider it to be a holy relic like Jewish people or the Muslims," says Balfour in a telephone interview from his Guelph, Ont., office.
Muslims generally dispose worn-out, Arabic language copies of the Qur'an by putting the pages to sea, burning them, or burying them on high ground, says Shahina Siddiqui, president of the Islamic Social Services Association.
She says English or other translations can be recycled, with the preferred method varying according to culture.
Boroditsky says the process of sorting through boxes of papers and books from the Jewish community has given her a better understanding of her heritage as an Orthodox Jew. As she leafs through volumes of commentaries, prayer books and scriptures, some brought to Winnipeg a century or more ago by immigrants from Russia, Poland or Ukraine, she wonders about the people who treasured them.
"Look at these books, how far they've travelled and (now) they've come to their end," she says of a small, fabric-bound book of the Psalms, printed in Poland in 1928.
But it will be a good end, one that places them back in the earth, as has been custom for centuries, she says.
"I would be happy to see them (the books) continue to live, but if it has to come to an end, at least it has some meaning to it."
brenda@suderman.com
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition October 11, 2009 A9
The comment period for this story has ended.
-
Breaking News Alerts
Sign up for our new Breaking News Alerts
-
Editor's Bulletin
Sign up for daily bulletins
-
Winnipeg road closures
Check if your commute is affected
-
Blogs to Watch
We pick our favourite local blogs for you to follow
-
Breaking News Widget
Create and embed a Winnipeg Free Press breaking news widget on your site or blog
-
Twitter
Follow our reporters and news feeds on Twitter
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Faith
Poll
Most Popular
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- City family's return from vacation turns tragic
- Corydon bar employee charged in man's death
- Second son dies after Kenora crash
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Happy hubby loves wife's nudity
- Girl tries to kill self at MYC
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- River Rouge runs aground
- Victims of deadly crash are from Winnipeg
- Tornado touches down near Oakbank
- City family's return from vacation turns tragic
- Man killed in motorcycle crash with car
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Man drowns in Whiteshell
- Monarch migration mystery solved by Canadian researchers
- Ice Edge loses exclusivity edge in Coyote deal
- Meat Loaf taken off MTS Centre’s menu
- Grandparent scam becoming more common in city
- What's 2204355? It's the latest unexplainable web trend
- Lundar resident faces charges over 911 calls
- Victims of deadly crash are from Winnipeg
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
- Teen takes own life after alleged assault
- Have the province and city gone too far in naming a lake and community centre after Jonathan Toews?
- Body found at The Forks tentatively identified
- Human head found at The Forks
- Body found near Grant Park
- Churches crumble across U.S.
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- Cost flap delays start on stadium
- Housing project future of infill
- Three dozen neglected dogs destroyed
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hey, hey, my, my... why do some fans behave like boors?
- Montana officials trap grizzly, 2 of her 3 cubs, after campground mauling that killed man
- The Oxy dilemma
- Cruisers curse police checks
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hells clubhouse seized
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Program to train aboriginal railway conductors
- Cost jump could change stadium design
- Core chaos shuts eatery's doors
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
- The Oxy dilemma
- Bombers boot beer snake
- More than 100 motorists charged under cellphone law
- Cruisers curse police checks
- Winnipeggers demonstrate against G20 protesters' treatment
- Winnipeg police unveil new decal, motto
- Hells clubhouse seized
- 'Dream home' lost, family devastated
- Bombers stamp out fun: fans
- WWII Lancaster Bomber flies into Winnipeg today
- Hydro picks its west side route
- Girl tries to kill self at MYC
- School staffer faces charges for sex crimes
- Province cautious on trials for multiple sclerosis therapy
- Corydon bar employee charged in man's death
- Housing project future of infill
- River Rouge runs aground
- Unfair to students
- Montana officials trap grizzly, 2 of her 3 cubs, after campground mauling that killed man
- Nasty, poisonous plant causes burns, blindness
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Old, new songs forever Young
- Woman who survived bear attack in US says she played dead to get the animal to leave her
- Saskatchewan premier calls for clinical trials of controversial MS treatment
- Liquid calories
- Tornado touches down near Oakbank
- Computer wiz's alter ego: Sir Lance-a-Lot
- WWII Lancaster Bomber flies into Winnipeg today
- Lundar resident faces charges over 911 calls
- Protection or peril?
- Nasty, poisonous plant causes burns, blindness
- Night storms jar Manitoba with tornado, washed out roads and hail
- Osteoporosis Canada issues updated vitamin D guidelines for bone health
- Nursing students' careers put on hold
- Last Grapes restaurant out of business
- A Royal whirlwind: The Queen's day in Winnipeg
- Bombers boot beer snake
- Katz dating younger woman -- but that shouldn't matter
Events
July 30, 2010
Gavins Chance for Change
Golf Tournament Fundraiser includes 18 holes of golf, cart, smokie or hamburger for lunch and banquet dinner. Registration at 8:30 a.m. Shotgun start at 10 a.m. ...


0 Comments
You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.