Jewish mourning is among the most elaborately developed of mourning traditions — a seven-day period of intensive communal support, a thirty-day period of gradual reengagement with life, a full year of grief observed through the Kaddish, and an annual remembrance thereafter. The structure embeds both acute loss and long-term remembrance into the rhythms of communal life in ways that grief researchers have increasingly recognized as psychologically sound. This domain examines the tradition and what it offers those inside and outside of it.
Each step builds on the last.