We all have loss in our lives. I wish we didn’t, but we do. So the real question is where do we turn with our grief? From whom do we seek and receive comfort? What practices help us to heal? For more and more people, the answer is Facebook and other social networking websites. A recent article in the Christian Science Monitor suggests that synagogues, churches, mosques, etc. have a lot to learn from the success such sites have in attracting young people especially as venues in which to share their grief and begin to heal.
The article’s author, bereavement expert Diana Nash, makes some important points and also misses some as well. Not least of which is what places like Facebook could learn from traditional religious communities. More accurately stated, I think it’s really about the ways in which different mourning communities meet different needs, and how making the best use of each of them is far more valuable than synthesizing them into some kind of magic bullet solution to grief.
Facebook is great precisely because of the anonymity which it affords its users. Mourners can pour out their hearts online to whoever is listening and there need not be any further exchange between them. They are bound by one thing and one thing only, a particular loss which they share. From the 150,000 mourners who posted on Michael Jackson’s page following his death, to the equal number of Facebook matches one finds by typing in the words “in memory of…” the numbers are too big to ignore.
Unquestionably, the purity of that experience and the lack of any further connections or obligations created by it are all attractive to those who mourn that way. And without belaboring the concerns about “false intimacy”, artificially elevated levels of loss created by the opportunity to join the circle of mourners at no emotional cost, etc. I think that we can all appreciate both the genuine value and real limitations of a totally open forum in which those who mourn together can say whatever they want, leave whenever they want, and have no ongoing relationships with one another.
The safety which media like Facebook create is a crucial element in grieving process – the safety to say whatever we want without fear of repercussion and the safety of knowing that whatever we say, someone is listening. On the other hand, the care of one’s family while they mourn, the attention to details that can only be addressed by those among whom we live, and the likelihood that only in the context of a physical community bound together by more than the desire to share their grief, will such things be properly addressed should not be forgotten in the rush to Facebook mourning groups.
There are also new possibilities including online visitation of mourners, saying Kaddish with a virtual minyan, the buying and delivery of virtual food to the homepages of mourners, just to name a few. While the latter is not physically nourishing, and that may be a crucial aspect of the the tradition of feeding mourners, can we deny it’s value as psychological and spiritual nourishment?
As is the case most of the time, the issue is not which is better or which is right, it’s how can we maximize different communities, virtual and real, learning from the best of what each has to offer, and make the grieving process more meaningful, effective, and healing for as many people as possible. The issue here is not about what’s hot in the death business, or even how traditional communities can catch up with Facebook. The issue is how new forms of community can enrich and enlighten the practices of older ones, and older ones can offer things which the new ones simply can’t.
So which is right? Both. Is one better than the other? Yes, but it depends on one’s needs at any given moment. I know those are such Jewish responses they are almost comical. But the truth is, they are rooted in a tradition which has always acknowledged that mourning is both a very public practice, to be shared with the larger community even if we do not know its members, and a deeply intimate process which begins among those closest to us listening to whatever we want to say for as long as we want to say it. There is synagogue mourning and home mourning, Kaddish-saying and story-telling, and we need them all. And, wherever we find them will be sacred space, whether it’s online, in person or both.



Author, radio and TV talk show host, and President of CLAL-The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, Brad Hirschfield is the author of 



posted October 20, 2009 at 1:44 pm
In a society that is so technologically oriented the resources and support for those grieving is many times overlooked. The general society so prides itself on its ability to overcome diversity that it often fails to recognize or acknowledge the unique practices and methods of Jewish funeral and grieving practices. In this way, the general culture also fails to support grief; the very process which helps people cope and grow through the despair of loss.
The rituals, traditions and the stories touch the mind, body and soul and begin the healing process.
posted October 21, 2009 at 12:57 pm
Great topic! I don’t know how I feel about ‘mourning groups’ but I have discovered that I now hear about deaths affecting those in my extended circle very quickly and have an easy way to extend condolences. Normally it would be extremely difficult to track down the bereaved but with a search on facebook finding a profile is simple and sending a note doesn’t require “friending” and there is no obligation for a reply on their part. If it’s a mitzvah to comfort the bereaved (granted, I won’t try to assign a level of value to the comfort comes from an e-mail)then I would guess anything that eases the lonliness during mourning would be a blessing. Electronic condolences may be tacky, but aren’t they better than nothing at all (for both parties)? Interested in others opinions on this. Thanks.
posted October 21, 2009 at 3:13 pm
I agree with Jen about social networking sites. I am glad I joined FaceBook, especially lately, with the loss of one of my oldest friends in the world at the young age of 56. Quite a few of our old schoolmates are on FaceBook, too, and I’ve seen their comments on him. I had no idea so many people loved my friend. Before FaceBook, I wouldn’t have heard from most of them at all.
Online social networking will never take the place of personal contact, but it makes those near and dear to us easier to get in touch with. People who criticize these sites are entitled to their opinions, but as far as I’m concerned, these sites are the best form of social contact since the telephone.
posted October 21, 2009 at 5:23 pm
I’m very glad to have read this. As a teacher, I have learned that I have to be willing to change with the times. Using Facebook as a community to support grief and mourning seems very strange to me. But using a real community seems fine. Yet some people just can’t ask for help from a real community, and why should they not use the community that makes them comfortable?
posted October 22, 2009 at 8:23 pm
Facebook????i’ll try to learn how to use it as a means of getting together.
posted August 13, 2010 at 3:59 am
My boyfriend is set to finish law school soon and I wanted a watch that reflected his upcoming transition into the "adult" world. It is beautiful, has a great weight to it and the dial face is great to look at?