My First Dead Body
“My Aunt Carmela died”.
These were Roseanne’s first words when I walked into the candy store where she waited for me. I was 19 and Roseanne was 17. We had been dating for a few months.
“The wake is at the Gun Hill Funeral Parlor…tomorrow”. I wasn’t sure why Roseanne shared that detail until I realized she expected me to go with her. The thought of this terrified me on so many levels. I had never been to a funeral and had no desire to go to one now, but I could tell that this was a social convention and I needed to go along with it.
Roseanne didn’t seem too upset about her aunt’s death, which was great because I probably didn’t have the emotional maturity to be very helpful. I was more than willing to provide a shoulder to cry on if needed. That seemed to be the best I could do.
I had also never met Roseanne’s parents and it was likely that I would also be meeting her entire extended family. This hardly seemed like the ideal occasion for a first meeting. In the best of circumstances, I was painfully shy. It was hard to see how this could go well.
I had only the most abstract understanding of the rituals around death, even though my mother had died eleven years earlier. In those years young people were shielded from issues around death. I was not permitted to attend her funeral. I wonder if this had allowed me to compartmentalize my mother’s death. I didn’t see her dead and therefore it didn’t happen. She just wasn’t there anymore.
So, without much choice, I showed up with Roseanne at the funeral parlor. People were milling about sitting on couches and comfortable chairs, talking very casually and I thought, “well this isn’t too bad”. What I quickly discovered was that this wasn’t the funeral itself but the lobby, or the parlor outside of four individual rooms, each one the site for a separate funeral. As soon as we found our way to the appropriate room the smell of flowers was overwhelming. It was like inhaling an air freshener on steroids. The perimeter of the large room was covered with wreaths and floral arrangements of every kind. Folding chairs were occupied by men in dark suits and women in black dresses. Sobs emanated from different sections of the room. I stood at the back, paralyzed by what I was looking at. I had no idea what I was supposed to do.
Adding to my feeling uncomfortable was that I was a “cultural stranger”. I was the only one in that room that was not Italian and Catholic. When my family moved to the east Bronx we encountered quite a bit of antisemitism (my relationship with Roseanne notwithstanding) so I never knew how I’d be received. Not knowing the funeral etiquette of any culture, I followed Roseanne’s lead and pretty much awaited instructions. All I could think of was Moses’ pronouncement, “I am a stranger in a strange land.”
I looked to the front of the room and there was the body, laid out in a tasteful black dress. I wondered what my mother wore as she lay in her coffin. I knew enough to know that black was appropriate, but I could not remember my mother ever wearing a black dress.
I watched people approach the deceased Aunt Carmela. They all pretty much followed the same routine: approach the coffin, peer into it for a few seconds, kneel in front of it, cross themselves, and get up. They would then approach the people who were sitting at the front closest to the coffin. These were the closest relatives of the deceased. In this case, they were the husband and siblings. The mourners would kiss them, express their condolences, and then find a seat in one of the rows behind the relatives. It was all very restrained and respectful.
I wondered if my mother’s funeral was like this, minus the crossing and the kneeling.
Seemingly out of nowhere, one of the more obviously grieving mourners, too overcome to just offer a blessing to the deceased, proceeded to lift her out of the coffin and hug her, wailing loudly. While I found this display of emotion shocking, most of the mourners were nonplussed. Mercifully, someone pried the body out of the arms of the grieving mourner who had to be led to a seat. I was so naïve to customary funeral behavior, that wondered whether this was part of the ritual.
Finally, Roseanne took my hand and led me to the casket. I stood by and watched her go through the ritual everyone else had. Kneeling, and crossing myself was not in my repertoire, so I just stood next to Roseanne, hoping I could appear somber from behind. I was too scared to manage more than a furtive glance at Aunt Carmela. I expected her to look like she was sleeping but I couldn’t imagine anyone sleeping that rigidly with their hands crossed in front of themselves. All the while I stood up there, I was afraid someone would confront me about my violation of funeral protocol. After Roseanne performed the expected ritual, she turned her attention to the front row mourners and offered her condolences. Then she said, “Uncle Joe, this is my boyfriend Eddie”. All I could mutter was “Hello, I’m so sorry”. Uncle Joe looked at me and with complete sincerity said, “thank you so much for coming”. As we made our way to the back of the room Roseanne introduced me to some other of her cousins who it seemed were unsurprised by this stranger who showed up at a somber family gathering. Why wasn’t I better prepared for this? If I had been to my mother’s funeral, would I know what to say or what to do? Finally, we came upon Roseanne’s parents. After she introduced me, I said “I’m sorry we’re meeting under these circumstances.” Roseanne’s mother took my hand and said, “It was really very nice of you to come.”
I was glad I came too. As my relationship with Roseanne progressed, I found her mother to be incredibly kind to me. I looked forward more and more to spending time with the family. Their rituals became my rituals.
At some level, even at that funeral, I began to understand what it means for people to show they care in your time of grief. But it took a number of years, and funerals, to realize that first of all, it’s not about me; and secondly, to understand that there are situations that transcend prejudice, and cultural collisions, and the only hope of peace with people different than ourselves, is meeting them in that place where we have a common inescapable experience.
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4 comments
Interesting perspective of how someone is facing their first dead body.
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Very well written. It also elicited memories of when my stepdad died; while depressing, I think it speaks volumes to the writing.
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Your description of the flowers particularly stood out to me :) It brought me back to my great grandfather's funeral, as I stood over his coffin. The whiff of the flowers, sitting a foot away was potent and has always stuck with me. The message of the story also reminded me of the verses in Ecc 7:2-4 "It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to go to the house of feasting: for that is the end of all men; and the living will lay it to his heart. Sorrow is better than laughter: for by the sadness of the countenance the heart is mad...
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My first body was a much more graphic state of affairs. Good luck.
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