News U.S. Jewish historians quickly shun suicide cults Masada analogy Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | April 4, 1997 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. NEW YORK — Judaism didn't escape the theological stew that led members of the Heaven's Gate cult to kill themselves last week. The 39 people found dead at a mansion outside San Diego adhered to a philosophy based on a loose amalgamation of extreme millennialist Christianity and New Age attitudes, overlaid by science fiction. Information that cult members had posted on the Internet cited the dramatic first-century saga of the Jews' suicide at Masada as the model for their own mass suicide. It is an analogy soundly rejected by Jewish historians. Another Jewish connection to the eerie story that has rocked the country was the claim of Heaven's Gate founder Marshall Herff Applewhite — who was not a Jew — that he worked as the cantorial soloist at a Houston-area Reform temple. The congregation in question is Temple Emanu El, whose Rabbi Roy Walter reported that Applewhite did not work as a cantorial soloist, but may have sung in the choir at some point in the mid-1960s. It is not unusual for Reform temples to employ non-Jews to sing worship liturgy as cantorial soloists or as members of a paid choir. Meanwhile, historians say that Heaven's Gate members linking Masada with their own plans was a misappropriation of Jewish history, because the Jewish zealots who killed themselves in the year 73 atop the desert plateau did so under siege by Roman troops. In a statement called "Our Position Against Assisted Suicide," which was published on the Heaven's Gate Web site and reprinted in the New York Times, members wrote: "We fully desire, expect and look forward to boarding a spacecraft from the Next Level very soon (in our physical bodies)… "It has always been our way to examine all possibilities, and be mentally prepared for whatever may come our way," the statement continued. "For example, consider what happened at Masada around 73 A.D. A devout Jewish sect, after holding out against a siege by the Romans to the best of their ability, and seeing that the murder, rape and torture of their community was inevitable, determined that it was permissible for them to evacuate their bodies by a more dignified, and less agonizing method." According to Yael Zerubavel, director of the Center for the Study of Jewish Life at Rutgers University and an expert on Masada, "Obviously this was really a paranoid state" that they were in. "Masada can become a self-fulfilling prophecy," she said. "If you think everyone's after you, that you will be enslaved, then you may get to the point where you think you have no way of surviving." The Heaven's Gate suicide was antithetical to Judaism, which rejects suicide except when death at the hands of an enemy is imminent, said Rabbi Ismar Schorsch, a historian who serves as chancellor of the Conservative movement's Jewish Theological Seminary. Under such conditions, self-inflicted death is considered martyrdom and a sanctification of God's name. The Jewish community's rejection of suicide is embodied in the principle that those who kill themselves should be buried outside the gates of a Jewish cemetery. In practice, though, Jewish law permits most suicides to be viewed as victims of mental illness so that they can be interred normally. The basic approach is that "Judaism embraces life," Schorsch said. "Judaism is a this-worldly religion, and suicide flies in the face of embracing life." Although universally known as the site of a Jewish mass suicide, Masada was initially used as refuge by the very people from whom the Jews later tried to escape. King Herod, the region's Roman ruler, built an enormous official palace on the rocky promontory in the year 40 BCE, when he took his family and fled Jerusalem to escape Mattathias Antigonus, who had been crowned king by the Parthians. Herod built a fortress on the site as well between 37 BCE and 31 BCE, according to the Encyclopedia Judaica, and later used it as a refuge from the Jews and from Cleopatra, the queen of Egypt. After he died, a Roman garrison was stationed there from the year 6 C.E. to 66 C.E., when at the outbreak of the Jewish war against the Romans a Jewish zealot named Menachem captured it. After Menachem was murdered in Jerusalem by Jewish rivals, his nephew Eleazar ruled until 73. In the year 72, the Roman governor Flavius Silva marched against Masada, which was the last remaining zealot stronghold of 960 defenders, bringing thousands of troops as well as thousands of Jewish prisoners of war. After a prolonged siege, the Romans breached the Jewish stronghold and, according to tradition, Eleazar persuaded his followers to kill themselves rather than fall into Roman hands. Two women and five children survived by hiding in a cave. But the story of the Jews' final chapter, which is based largely on the writings of the historian Josephus — who himself was the only survivor of a Jewish mass suicide in the Galilee and later defected to the Roman side — is historically questionable, said Schorsch. Nevertheless, it became a myth central to the national Jewish psyche after the Holocaust, said Zerubavel, when Jews needed to reinvent their national self-image from a people led helplessly to Nazi slaughterhouses into a people ready to die in self-defense rather than being victimized by persecutors. Indeed, it is atop Masada's summit that Israel's Armored Corps recruits swear their oath of allegiance: "Masada Shall Not Fall Again." J. Correspondent Also On J. Art Dovekeepers brings Masada saga to the small screen Opinion Coercion, intimidation are way of cults, not Judaism News Masada — symbol of resistance or overblown myth Art Frescoes restored, returned to Masada palace Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes