Category: Asia
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Grief and Celebration on Yom HaAtzma’ut: Israeli Mourning Traditions in a Time of War
What Yom HaAtzma’ut Feels Like
In early May, spring is in bloom across Israel. Hillsides are painted in red poppies and yellow wildflowers. The air carries warmth — perfect for outdoor gatherings — and streets fill with the smell of grilled meats and the hum of music.
Families head to parks, beaches, and nature trails with Israeli flags in hand. They barbecue, sing, laugh, and rest.
But beneath the celebration is a shared understanding: we are only here because others are not.
“Before we started the mangal,” says Orna, whose son fell in combat last year, “we lit a candle and set a plate for him. Then we played his favorite song. We smiled through tears. That’s how we carry him.”
Today’s Yom HaAtzma’ut: Grief in a Time of War
This year, Yom HaAtzma’ut arrives during a deeply painful time. The ongoing war and the presence of hostages have reshaped the emotional tone of the holiday.
- Some celebrations have been canceled or scaled back.
- Ceremonies include silence for the hostages and fallen soldiers.
- Families of the kidnapped often mourn and protest rather than celebrate.
Even for those not directly affected, the mood is heavier. Flags still wave, grills still light, but the songs are softer. Joy feels complicated — and that’s okay.
Mourning Practices Around Yom HaAtzma’ut
Because Yom HaAtzma’ut follows Yom HaZikaron, many families shift quickly from grief to celebration — a cultural and emotional pivot few outsiders can understand.
On Yom HaZikaron, candles are lit, cemeteries are visited, and national radio airs personal stories. The entire country stands still during the siren. Then, at sundown, Yom HaAtzma’ut begins.
At the national torch-lighting ceremony on Mount Herzl, thirteen citizens are chosen each year to light torches. In 2024, several were lit in honor of hostages and fallen first responders.
Many families continue their remembrance with a lit candle, a prayer, or a shared story before festivities begin.
What Can Friends and Supporters Do?
- 🕯️ Acknowledge both holidays
- 💬 Reach out with empathy
- 👂 Offer presence, not platitudes
- 🫶 Support verified causes like hostagesandmissingfamilies.org
Your presence and words, even from afar, can bring deep comfort.
A Word from Solviah to the Griever
To the one celebrating with a shadow over your heart —
To the one who lights a candle before you light a grill —
To the one who watches the fireworks through quiet tears —We see you. We honor you. You are not alone.
At Solviah, we believe grief is not something to “get over.” It’s something to carry with care. And this Yom HaAtzma’ut, we carry it with you.
Zikhronam livrakha
May their memory be a blessing.Glossary
- Yom HaAtzma’ut: Israeli Independence Day
- Yom HaZikaron: Memorial Day for fallen soldiers and victims of terror
- Mangal: Traditional Israeli outdoor barbecue
- Hostages: Individuals kidnapped during war or terror attacks
- Diaspora: Jewish communities outside Israel
- Zikhronam livrakha: Hebrew for “May their memory be a blessing”
References
- Ben-Yehuda, N., & Mishali-Ram, M. (2006). The commemoration of Israeli soldiers in public rituals and sites. Memory Studies, 1(2), 123–136.
- Rosenblatt, P. C. (2017). Grief across cultures. In Stroebe, M., Schut, H., & van den Bout, J. (Eds.), Handbook of Bereavement Research and Practice (pp. 207–222). American Psychological Association.
- Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (n.d.). Yom HaZikaron and Yom HaAtzma’ut: National Commemoration and Celebration. Retrieved from gov.il
- Goodman, Y. (2010). Military, memory, and the politics of mourning in Israel. Ethos, 38(4), 369–389.

Grieving in Israeli Culture: Yom HaZikaron and Jewish Mourning Traditions
Table of Contents
“We will never forget you. We will never cease to mourn you. We will never let you down.”
— Official Yom HaZikaron Memorial Message, State of Israel
In Israel, remembrance is not an afterthought—it is a national rhythm. Yom HaZikaron, the Day of Remembrance for Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terror, opens a sacred space where grief is both national and deeply personal.
A Nation Paused: Sirens, Stillness, and Spring Air
At 8:00 p.m., a siren rings out across Israel for one minute. Cars stop. People stand. Silence falls.
The next morning, a two-minute siren at 11:00 a.m. begins official ceremonies across the country.
The Red Everlasting flower, Dam HaMaccabim, adorns graves and lapels, symbolizing remembrance and sacrifice.
Jewish Mourning Traditions Within an Israeli Frame
- Ner Zikaron: Memorial candles lit in homes and cemeteries.
- Kaddish/Yizkor: Prayers recited to honor the dead.
- Food: Dishes like lentil soup and round challah reflect Jewish mourning symbols.
- Dress: Modest or subdued clothing shows solidarity and grief.
Today’s Israel: Grief Amid War and Trauma
Following the October 7th attacks and ongoing conflict, Yom HaZikaron in 2025 carries new weight. It’s no longer just memorial—it’s therapy.
It’s survival. Families grieve fresh wounds alongside generational ones.
How to Support from Afar
- Observe moments of silence during Israel’s sirens.
- Attend virtual memorials or share reflections online.
- Reach out to Israeli friends or Jewish communities.
- Educate yourself and others with resources like For Supporters & Friends.
A Sacred Transition: From Mourning to Joy
At sundown, Yom HaZikaron ends and Yom HaAtzmaut begins. Fireworks replace tears. This contrast is intentional—a national expression of resilience.
What Can This Culture Teach Us?
Grief in Israeli culture teaches us that mourning can be a communal act. That sorrow remembered can birth strength. And that the past lives in us when we choose to carry it forward.
Join the Conversation
Have you participated in Yom HaZikaron? How does your culture honor its fallen? Share your experience in the comments.
Glossary
- Yom HaZikaron: Israeli Memorial Day
- Yom HaAtzmaut: Israeli Independence Day
- Ner Zikaron: Memorial candle
- Kaddish/Yizkor: Jewish mourning prayers
- Shiva/Shloshim/Yahrzeit: Jewish grief periods
- Dam HaMaccabim: Red Everlasting flower of remembrance
Sources (APA Style)
- Masa Israel Journey. (2023). Yom HaZikaron. https://www.masaisrael.org/yom-hazikaron-israel-memorial-day/
- Wikipedia contributors. (2025). Yom HaZikaron. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yom_HaZikaron
- JNS.org. (2025). ‘Every day is Memorial Day for us’. https://www.jns.org/every-day-is-memorial-day-for-us/
- Rabbi Sacks Legacy. (2022). Yom HaZikaron: Family Edition. https://rabbisacks.org/yom-hazikaron-family-edition/

Finding Peace in Loss: A Chinese Perspective on Healing After Death
Introduction: Wrestling with Loss Through Culture and Tradition
Grieving is a deeply personal experience, but how we mourn is often shaped by the culture we come from. For those connected to Chinese heritage, the process of loss is both spiritual and communal, ancient and evolving. Unlike Western grief traditions that often emphasize private reflection, Chinese grief practices are grounded in family, ritual, and a worldview that extends beyond the individual to include ancestors and the unseen spiritual realm.
Yet modern life complicates this. For many younger generations or those in multicultural families, Chinese grief traditions may feel unfamiliar or even inaccessible. Others may struggle to balance traditional customs with emotional needs in today’s fast-paced, globalized world. This tension invites an important question: Can we still find peace in loss through culture and spirituality? The answer is yes—but it requires understanding, intention, and grace.
“Filial Piety is the Root of Virtue” (孝为德之本)
This Confucian principle remains a cornerstone of Chinese culture. Xiao (孝)—filial piety—demands that children honor their parents in life and in death. This sense of duty shapes every aspect of Chinese mourning, from funeral customs to annual memorial rituals.
In Chinese grief, honoring the dead is not merely symbolic. It is seen as necessary to maintain harmony between the realms of the living and the departed. Offerings are made not out of superstition but of devotion. Through these acts—whether burning incense or preparing favorite foods—we affirm a continuous bond. In grief, we fulfill virtue.
Devotional Reflection: A Spiritual Dialogue with the Departed
In homes across China and among diaspora families, ancestral altars serve as quiet sanctuaries of connection. A photo, a bowl of fruit, a stick of incense—these simple acts form a language of love that transcends death.
Taoist philosophy teaches that life and death are part of the same cosmic cycle, like the flowing of a river. Buddhism, so influential in Chinese religious life, frames suffering and impermanence as opportunities for growth and release. And while Confucianism focuses on moral order, all three traditions converge on this point: the dead are never truly gone. They live on in memory, in ritual, and in the moral fabric of the family.
These beliefs create space for healing. Instead of fearing death, culture teaches us to walk through it with reverence. Instead of suppressing grief, it is channeled into ritual and remembrance.
Culture and Psychology Blend: Lament and Hope in Harmony
Modern psychology recognizes that grief needs to be expressed, but expression looks different across cultures. In Western traditions, verbalizing feelings is often emphasized. In Chinese grief, ritual is the language of mourning.
- Wailing at funerals allows for unfiltered emotion.
- Wearing white signals mourning and purity.
- Burning joss paper or “hell money” offers support for ancestors in the afterlife.
- Qingming Festival invites families to clean tombs, reflect, and reunite through remembrance.
According to Rosenblatt (2008), cultures that offer communal, symbolic expressions of grief can ease the psychological burden of mourning. These rituals offer a sense of control, meaning, and continuity—what Paul Wong (2014) calls “meaning-making,” a key part of emotional recovery.
Younger generations may question these practices—but they are bridges, not burdens. Rituals offer psychological safety in the unknown. They carry the weight of grief when words cannot.
A Friend’s Personal Reflection: My Grandmother’s Bowl of Oranges
When my grandmother died, I didn’t know how to mourn her in a way that felt “right.” I had grown up between cultures—Christian in belief, Chinese in blood. At her memorial, my mother placed a bowl of oranges and a cup of tea by her photo. I remember asking, “Will she really drink it?”
My mother smiled: “No. But we will. And we’ll remember her favorite things.”
That act—simple, sacred, and communal—taught me something about grief. It’s not about fixing pain, but finding a rhythm to carry it. One shaped by faith, by memory, and by love.
One Extra You Might Not Know: The 49-Day Ritual
In Buddhist-influenced Chinese mourning, there is a belief that the soul transitions for 49 days after death. Families may hold weekly ceremonies or chant sutras during this time to guide the soul and offer peace.
Even in modern cities, this ritual is practiced quietly in homes, temples, or even online. It is a profound gesture of care—not only for the departed but also for the grieving. The 49-day ritual gives structure to chaos, offering mourners a spiritual timeline for lament, hope, and eventual healing.
If you’re grieving and looking for a way to honor someone Chinese or of Chinese descent, consider observing even one of these seven-week rituals. It can be profoundly healing.
Closing Thought: Let Culture Be Your Comfort
Grief is universal, but comfort is cultural. Whether you light incense, cook their favorite dish, or simply sit in silence with their photo, let your heritage speak healing into your loss.
Let your mourning be a tribute to your roots—and a bridge to peace.
References
- Rosenblatt, P. C. (2008). Grief across cultures: A review and research agenda. In M. S. Stroebe, R. O. Hansson, H. Schut, & W. Stroebe (Eds.), Handbook of bereavement research and practice: Advances in theory and intervention (pp. 207–222). American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/14498-010
- Wong, P. T. P. (2014). Viktor Frankl’s meaning-seeking model and positive psychology. In A. Batthyany & P. Russo-Netzer (Eds.), Meaning in Positive and Existential Psychology (pp. 149–184). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-0308-5_9
- Yang, C. K. (1961). Religion in Chinese Society: A Study of Contemporary Social Functions of Religion and Some of Their Historical Factors. University of California Press.
- Chan, W. (1963). A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy. Princeton University Press.