Why does the Torah devote an entire chapter - no less than 20 verses - to the burial of Sarah in this week's portion? Why does the sacred Biblical text discuss with such detail Abraham's procurement of a proper burial place?

Until this point, no one's death has evoked this much concern.



After all, until this point, no one's death has evoked this much concern. Biblical characters are born, they live and they die. Even Noah receives no special eulogy; it's flat and perfunctory: "All of Noah's days were 950 years and he died." (Genesis 9:29) That's it.


So all the devotion, bargaining and patience that Abraham expresses in making sure that Sarah rests properly in eternal peace seem all the more worthy of our scrutiny. A clue to the answer can be found in the oxymoron of a phrase Abraham uses to describe himself to the children of Heth: ger v'toshav, "alien and resident" (23:4) - two opposite descriptions.


Why does Abraham describe himself in such ambivalent, almost paradoxical terms? From one perspective, the phrase exquisitely captures Judaism in exile, with one foot here and one foot elsewhere, on the one hand, tax-paying citizens mastering the legal system, culture and language down to its subtlest nuances, but at the same time, ready to leave on a moment's notice when the host country decides that we Jews are aliens after all. As Tevye wryly remarks when he and his co-religionists are forced to leave Anatevka, "That's why we Jews always wear a hat; we must be ready to get out at a moment's notice." And remember that when Abraham was negotiating with the Hittites, they were in control of Canaan.


But even more profoundly, the phrase "alien-resident" expresses the realization that every human being's connection to the world is temporary, his existence tempered by the experiences that remind him of mortality. Every one of us lives in this transient world as a resident-alien. As we shall see in the Book of Leviticus, we read G-d's command that once every 50 years - the Jubilee year - all purchased lands must return to the original owners. The Bible explains, "And the land shall not be sold into in perpetuity, for the land is Mine; you are strangers and settlers with Me." (Leviticus 25:23) Nothing in this world really belongs to us, is really permanent, not even "real estate."


Perhaps it is because Abraham is aware of the resident-stranger condition of humanity that he seeks a permanent burial site for Sarah and is ultimately willing to pay so much money for it. Indeed, the chapter ends with the declaration that the cave became the "uncontested property" of Abraham. This may very well be the source for the principle expressed in the Ethics of the Fathers: "This world may be compared to a foyer before the world to come; prepare yourself in the foyer so that you may properly enter the living room." (4:21)


Every one of us lives in this transient world as a resident-alien.



Abraham understands death differently than anyone who ever lived before him, and therefore sees the grave site as an "eternal" monument, which stands for an existence beyond the body's expiration. After all, the corollary to the fact that every person is created "in the Divine image," infused with "a portion of the Divine from Above," is that we are endowed with a piece of eternity - a soul, which lives beyond our physical existence. Hence, the Jewish customs of death, the significance of kever Yisrael - a Jewish burial - are derived from this week's portion.


Why do we light a yahrtzeit candle? Why is cremation a major sin in Judaism? Why Yizkor and Kaddish? Why do we gather together when the burial monument (matzeva) is unveiled? All of these customs are based on the idea that there is an eternity, a reality based on the beyond of this reality, a life of the spirit that, if properly nurtured in this world - the temporary world for the eternal world - is much more significant than the day a soul leaves its eternity for its temporary sojourn down below.


To be sure, the kind of life a person lives in this world determines his portion in the eternal world, and the bettering of the world here and now is a most legitimate Jewish goal. Nevertheless, once a person accepts the limitations of this world and the limitless nature of the next one, everything he does takes on a different cast.


Maimonides, the arch-rationalist, usually stresses that Judaism's purpose for life is to improve this world. Nevertheless, the major thrust in his Laws of Repentance deals with the world to come and the eternity of the soul. Indeed, for Maimonides, the most significant human endeavor in this world is in establishing an abiding relationship with one's spirit, with one's God, with one's eternity; that is what brings eternal life.


Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzato (1707-1747), in his work Paths of the Righteous, asks: "Why were we put in this world in the first place?" He answers that "we are put in this world to enjoy it." Yet, what brings true enjoyment? Only spiritual achievement. What is physical will, after all, eventually disappear or dissolve. That is why, he argues, too much of anything physical will make you retch. Only the spiritual and eternal ultimately provides real pleasure.


Ernest Becker, in his masterful work Denial of Death, queries why a physical act as pleasurable and wondrous as the sexual union has linguistically become the source for words of destruction and curses, "dirty" jokes, locker-room humor. He theorizes that anything that is physical cannot give a person consummate joy, because it only reminds him that one day he, too, will disappear. Indeed, the British poets use the word "death" to describe the sexual orgasm.


Hence, the human response to the sexual act is ambivalent. Its pleasure has a bitter

The most crucial human enterprise is the search for immortality.

undertaste since it reminds the individual of his eventual mortality. Becker likewise concludes that the most crucial human enterprise is the search for immortality, the connection with that aspect of our essence that lives beyond death.


Abraham establishes a "Jewish" burial plot, for which he pays an enormous amount of money, in order to teach that there is a life of the spirit that defies and transcends death.


Perhaps this is why the portion is called Chayei Sarah - the life of Sarah - because even after her death, Sarah lives. The righteous, according to the Talmud (Berakhot 18a), are alive even after their deaths, while the wicked are dead even when they're alive. Only connection with the eternal spirit brings eternal life.