Plan marks a departure from Jewish tradition, which dictates that a body should be buried within 24 hours, with some exceptions; justice to be buried beside her husband next week

FILE: Supreme Court Justices, from left, Elena Kagan, Samuel Anthony Alito, Jr., Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Anthony Kennedy participate in prayers at a private ceremony in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Feb. 19, 2016, where late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia lies in repose. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)
FILE: Supreme Court Justices, from left, Elena Kagan, Samuel Anthony Alito, Jr., Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Anthony Kennedy participate in prayers at a private ceremony in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court in Washington, Friday, Feb. 19, 2016, where late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia lies in repose. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

 

WASHINGTON (JTA) — As she made history during her illustrious life, Ruth Bader Ginsburg will do so upon her passing: She will become the first Jew to lie in state at the Capitol building, and the first woman, Jewish or non.

The gravesite of Martin Ginsburg, the husband of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as the flag flies at half-staff at Arlington House, formerly named the Custis-Lee Mansion, Sunday, Sept. 20, 2020 at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Va. Ginsburg will be buried next week at Arlington National Cemetery, beside her husband Martin, in a private service, the court said. (AP Photo/Alan Fram)
The gravesite of Martin Ginsburg, the husband of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as the flag flies at half-staff at Arlington House, formerly named the Custis-Lee Mansion, Sunday, Sept. 20, 2020 at Arlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Va. Ginsburg will be buried next week at Arlington National Cemetery, beside her husband Martin, in a private service, the court said. (AP Photo/Alan Fram)

The body of the late Supreme Court justice, who died Friday at 87, will first lie “in repose” at the Supreme Court building, on Wednesday and Thursday, and then the Capitol on Friday, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced Monday.

Lying in state is reserved for only the most significant and revered public figures. The plan marks a departure from Jewish tradition, which dictates that a body should be buried within 24 hours, with some exceptions, including the Sabbath and time to gather relatives. (Non-Orthodox traditions have made allowances for other exigent circumstances.)

Ginsburg will be buried next week at Arlington National Cemetery, beside her husband Martin, in a private service, the court said.

Ginsburg will be only the 35th person to lie in state at the Capitol. The first was Henry Clay, the revered Kentucky senator who died while still in office in 1852. The second was President Abraham Lincoln, assassinated in 1865. Ginsburg’s coffin will lie on the Lincoln Catafalque, the Supreme Court said.

Ginsburg will also be only the second Supreme Court justice to lie in state at the Capitol, after William Howard Taft, who had also served as president, in 1930.

There have been eight Jewish Supreme Court justices; the five who predeceased Ginsburg did not lie in repose. Not every justice is accorded the honor — most recently, Antonin Scalia, Ginsburg’s close friend and ideological opposite, lay in repose following his death in 2016. The Supreme Court did not supply a list of justices who have lain in repose.

The high court also accorded Ginsburg the traditional honor of draping her chair and desk with black wool crepe. A black drape has been hung over the courtroom doors. The tradition dates to 1873 and the death of Chief Justice Salmon Chase. Sitting justices who die in office have their desk and chair draped, and the death of all justices is marked by the drape on the courtroom doors.

The most recent person to lie in state at the Capitol was Georgia Rep. John Lewis, the civil rights icon who died in August.

The only other woman who lay “in honor” at the Capitol was Rosa Parks, the civil rights hero — but she did not get the distinction of lying “in state” because she was not a military veteran or stateswoman. Besides Parks, another three people have “lain in honor” at the Capitol.

Visitors file past the casket of Rosa Parks in the US Capitol Rotunda, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005 in Washington. Parks, the woman whose defiant act on a city bus inspired the modern civil rights movement, is the first woman to lay in honor in the Rotunda. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Visitors file past the casket of Rosa Parks in the US Capitol Rotunda, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005 in Washington. Parks, the woman whose defiant act on a city bus inspired the modern civil rights movement, is the first woman to lay in honor in the Rotunda. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

 

The plan to have Ginsburg lie in state means that the Jewish period of mourning, called shiva, could be cut short. Shiva, a seven-day period when immediate family members separate from the world and are comforted by their community, traditionally begins right after a funeral and is ended early by holidays such as Yom Kippur, which begins Sunday night.

The justice died Friday at age 87, from pancreatic cancer. She served on the court for 27 years, appointed in 1993 by President Bill Clinton.

As reported by The Times of Israel