Shiva Minyan House Call
Shiva calls can be hard to make, especially if it is your first time. The information below aims to help prepare you to make a shiva call. Learn how to give comfort to Jewish relatives or friends in mourning.
Enter the shiva house quietly.
Mourners are not expected to greet people at the door, and you don’t want to
interrupt if the service has already begun. Give a quiet knock, and then quietly
walk inside the house. Please do not ring the doorbell.
Enter the room of the mourner quietly.
The best way to greet the mourner is to sit down quietly near him or her. There
is no expectation of a “greeting” between the mourner and the shiva caller. But
if you want to give the mourner a hug or handshake, then you can do this.
However, try to avoid everyday lines like “How are you?”
Respond to the mourner.
If the mourner speaks to you, respond. But if they are quiet, then it is okay
just to sit quietly in the room. It is tiring for the mourner to talk all day
long, and he or she might prefer to just sit quietly in your company.
Best Shiva Call Topic of Conversation
The best topic of conversation at a shiva call is the person who has passed
away. If the mourner feels like talking, you can tell stories and share memories
about the person who passed away with the mourner.
Worst Shiva Call Topics of Conversation
There is no need to cheer the mourner up with jokes or distract the mourner from
sad feelings with chatter. Shiva is the time for the bereaved to mourn. Give the
bereaved the space to mourn, even if it includes crying.
Food and drinks
Mourners are not expected to be hosts, but those who are close to the mourners
might offer some refreshments to shiva callers. It is acceptable if you want to
bring some refreshments to the home – nuts, dried fruit, cakes, casseroles … -
for the bereaved family, but remember to respect the level of kosher observance
of the shiva home.
Traditional Statement of Comfort in Judaism
The following statement of comfort is traditionally said to mourners – in Hebrew
or English - just before leaving the shiva house.
May God comfort you among the other mourners of Zion and Jerusalem.
Ha-Makom y'nachem et'chem b'toch sha'ar aveilei Tzion v'Yerushalayim.
Leave the shiva house quietly
Again, mourners are not expected to be hosts and see people to the door. Some
people say the traditional line above, nod to the bereaved, and then leave
quietly. Others give the mourners a hug or hand shake, and walk out quietly.
As published on the Beth Shalom website www.bslkn.org