DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 996 KB)
Is It Permissible To Place Memorial Tomb Stones At The Graves of Tzadikim

The Gemara in Masechet Shekalim (7) cites the ruling of Rabban Shimon Ben Gamliel (listen to audio clip for precise citation), "Monuments are not made for the righteous; their words are their memory." This means that it would be inappropriate to erect a monument on the grave of a Tzadik, because it gives the impression that a stone is required to perpetuate his memory, when in truth his Torah is what keeps his memory alive.

Of course, Jewish practice throughout the ages has been to erect tombstones on the graves of great Tzadikim. How may we reconcile this widespread practice with Rabban Shimon Ben Gamliel's ruling?

A partial answer emerges from a comment of the Yabetz (Rabbi Yaakov Emden, Germany, 1697-1776), who noted that the patriarch Yaakov indeed erected a tombstone over the grave of his righteous wife, Rachel (Bereishit 35:20), seemingly in direct opposition to Rabban Shimon's comment. The Yabetz explains that since women are exempt from the formal obligation of Torah study, we cannot apply to them the reason given for not erecting tombstones – "their words are their memory." Since women generally are not teachers of Torah, it is indeed appropriate to erect monuments to perpetuate their memory.

The Yabetz's analysis suffices to explain the practice to erect tombstones over the graves of righteous women; it does not, however, provide a basis for allowing tombstones at the gravesites of righteous men.

The Mishnat Yosef suggests that although ideally tombstones should not be necessary for the perpetuation of a Tzadik's memory, the Sages that lived after the time of the Talmud saw a need for tombstones to help ensure that the Torah will never be forgotten. They feared that with the natural decline of the generations and the difficult tribulations of exile, the Jewish people may forget the Torah. Erecting visible tombstones on the graves of Tzadikim helps preserve their memory and in this way ensures the continuity of the chain of tradition passed from one generation to the next through the teachings of the scholars.

The Mahrash Silio advances a much different interpretation of the Gemara's comment, whereby it does not forbid erecting tombstones to memorialize Tzadikim. According to his reading, the Gemara simply meant that a monument is not necessary for perpetuating the memory of a Tzadik, since his memory lives on through his Torah teachings. There is, however, an additional reason for erecting tombstones, namely, to serve as a marker of where the Tzadik is buried. It is important to visibly mark the gravesite so that Kohanim do not approach the grave, and also for those who wish to pray at the gravesite. Therefore, it is certainly permissible to erect a tombstone over a Tzadik's grave; the Gemara simply meant that the other reason for erecting a tombstone – to memorialize the deceased – does not apply to Tzadikim, since their memory is perpetuated through their Torah.

Likewise, Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, in his "Iggerot Moshe" (Yoreh Dei'a, 4:57) notes that there are Kabbalistic reasons for erecting a tombstone at the gravesite of a Tzadik, as discussed at length in the writings of the Arizal and Rabbi Chayim Vital, and in the work "Ma'avar Yabok." Therefore, even if a tombstone is not necessary to memorialize a Tzadik, it serves other purposes, as well, and is therefore permissible.

In conclusion, then, the widespread practice of erecting tombstones at the gravesites of righteous men and women is perfectly valid, and it should not be perceived as an insult or affront to the honor of the Tzadik.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pouring Into a Sink With a Strainer on Shabbat
Paying a Doctor for Services Rendered on Shabbat; Renting a Hotel Room for Only Shabbat
Is a Wife Bound by Her Husband’s Early Acceptance of Shabbat?
At What Point in the Friday Night Prayer Service Does One Accept Shabbat?
Asking a Gentile to Turn On a Light for a Frightened Child, or To Turn On the Heat or Air Conditioning
Scheduling a Wakeup Call on Shabbat
Opening a Refrigerator Door on Shabbat if the Light Was Not Disengaged
Shabbat Candle Lighting – The Custom to Light Two Candles; Lighting When the Parents are Away for Shabbat
If the Person Who Recited Kiddush is Unable to Drink the Required Amount of Wine
Eating and Drinking Before Kiddush
Until When May a Woman Light Shabbat Candles on Friday Afternoon?
When is the Latest Time for Eating the “Se’uda Rebi’it” Meal on Mosa’eh Shabbat?
Shabbat – Using an Urn with a Water Level Indicator
Shabbat – Wearing a Garment That Causes Static Electricity
Leaving Water on an Open Lame Before Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found