55.3 F
Spokane
Saturday, April 26, 2025
spot_img
HomeCommentaryStones For The Living

Stones For The Living

Date:

spot_img

Related stories

Idaho twins honor Pope Francis with the values he held so dear

Idaho twins, growing up in the Catholic faith, honor Pope Francis through their faith, service and love for their Catholic community.

Interfaith dialogue opens hearts at student religious conference

Although I admit to not being the most talkative person, it was fascinating to listen in and have conversations with others about their personal religious experiences. 

Student navigates religious conference despite personal doubts

Student navigates religious conference despite personal doubts Guest Column by...

As world mourns Pope Francis, the Vatican’s conclave convenes

The Vatican begins papal transition after Pope Francis' death with rituals, his funeral and preparations for a conclave to elect a new pope.

Francis, a pope for a time such as this

Pope Francis died after Easter in this Jubilee year of Hope. The pope's life was a miracle of mercy, unity and love - all needed for such a time as this.

Our Sponsors

spot_img

By Hyphen Parent

On Jewish graves, you’ll find stones left on grave markers. We don’t typically use flowers at graveyards. Some argue it’s not right to mark one death by sacrificing the life of flowers. Instead we leave stones on the grave or tombstone when we visit. Flowers will whither and die. A stone, like the person’s soul and the impact of their life remains forever.

Stories about the origin of leaving stones range from superstitious to pragmatic. Today, however, my take on the matter is that stones aren’t left for the dead. Stones are left for the living.

The dead are gone. They’re not bothered by what’s on their tombstones. The living, however, take comfort both in leaving and seeing stones.

When we see stones on the grave markers of those we love, we take comfort in knowing others remember them as well. It’s a visual reminder to us that we are a part of a family and community and that those we loved and lost are as well.

We leave stones on graves to connect us to that person. It’s one way of telling the world that this person was important to us. It’s a way of proving that this person existed and they were in some way a part of us—we are connected to them even after death. Sometimes in death, we want even more desperately to feel connected to them. When they can’t speak up to claim us as their own, we need a symbol of that connection even more.

Sometimes, death leaves us without the words to adequately explain what that person meant to us. Sometimes death leaves us without the words to tell to the living how much we care or how very sorry we are for the loss. Leaving stones on tombstones is one way for us to express that. A stone marks that someone remembers, someone continues, and someone cares.

If everyone who reads and appreciates FāVS, helps fund it, we can provide more content like this. For as little as $5, you can support FāVS – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.

[give_form id=”53376″ show_title=”true” display_style=”button”]

Hyphen Parent
Hyphen Parent
Dorothy-Ann Parent (better known as Hyphen) is a writer, a traditional Jew, a seeker of justice, a lover of stories and someone who’s best not left unattended in a bookshop or animal shelter.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x