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  • 5/16/2025
Shmuel, a Hasidic cantor in Upstate New York and distraught at the untimely death of his wife, struggles to find religio | dG1fT25VN3pkUGpnSDQ
Transcript
00:00You
00:04Can I help you you are a scientist? I'm a science teacher. I have questions
00:10I'm not sure that I'm gonna be able to be of service to your rabbi. I'm not a rabbi my wife. She died. I
00:18Fear her soul is suffering. She returns to the earth
00:22What's to become of her body?
00:30They use pigs. They most closely resemble people. The body is reduced to tiny bits of skin and bone
00:36And how long does this thing I suppose one could bury a pig. I don't imagine that that's
00:43Kosher
00:46I buried a pig. We're having office hours here
00:50Just realized nobody knows where I am should have left a note
00:53This is unscientific at best. You may have pig more like your wife. No offense
01:03Will this make you better? I hope it's here
01:06I'm here to see Schmel. He's a friend of mine a business friend. Look, it's a body farm in Tennessee. What's a body farm?
01:15We have on our hands a woman. She was buried six feet under back in June. What's that body gonna look like right about now?
01:21Where did you say you were from?
01:26His blood is on our hands. His mud is on my carpet
01:31What are you after Schmel? What is this all about? I don't know
01:37What's your friend's name? Schmel. Schmuel. Jesus loves you Schmel Schmuel

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