Throughout history, societies have dealt with death in every imaginable way. From the very beginning of the Jewish people, although many options were available, Jews have always insisted on one: burial. Avraham's first recorded act of ownership in the Land of Israel was purchasing a burial site.
Until recently, that consensus held across the Jewish world. Today, mirroring wider trends, a large and growing share of Jewish deaths in North America are followed by cremation — usually for reasons that feel practical: the environment, distance, discomfort, cost. Each deserves an honest answer.