Original source : http://www.wonderslist.com
Posted :
Author : Sarah Salman
This is a list of some interesting and weird rituals in
which people belonging to different cultures disposed their loved ones to the
God, after they have ceased to live. Some bury their loved ones while others
burn them. But there are some never heard of most bizarre funeral traditions in
the world that you are going to be shocked after knowing. Read ahead to know
about these shocking death rituals and traditions from around the globe.
10. Famadihana
9. Tree-Bound
This tradition simply involved tying the dead to the ancient
trees found among the village of the deceased. This ritual is probable to be
practiced by people who are atheist and do not follow any certain set of
traditions and culture. This ensures that their dead ones are always in the
hearts of the people and the ritual is a way of reminding others that they must
prepare for death and the live thereafter.
8. Hanging of Coffins
This ancient ritual practiced by the old Chinese Dynasties
involved the displaying of coffins on high rock cliffs. They believe that
coffins need to be close to the sky so that their dead can be closer to heaven.
The coffins were actually discovered by the archaeologists among the remains of
these ancient civilizations. Setting of coffins meant that the still thought of
their dead in the highly respectable positions and their ghosts and spirits are
free to roam around the hills and rocks.
7. Mass Scavenging
This ancient ritual practice by the indigenous people of the
Pacific Northwest Coast of North America. The ritual involves throwing all the dead
people in a vicinity of town, village or city in one pit and then letting wild
animals loose for them to feed on the dead bodies. This way the relatives do
not need to perform any other methods like burial and cremation. Disposing of
the bodies through this method lets the dead live only in one form in the
hereafter and they have no belongings in the real world, not even their own
bodies.
6. Exposing Dead to Vultures
Another bizarre tradition being revitalized by the Parsi
community of Mumbai. Mainly a ritual practiced by the Zoroastrian religion, by
first preparing the dead by cleansing and bathing them and then setting them up
on Towers of their religious temples to vultures. The idea behind this
tradition is that the dead must get rid of their physical forms and must only
survive in one being, i.e. their spiritual selves.
5. Cremation
Still practiced in the modern world, the ritual involves
setting a proper platform of wood and then setting the dead ones on fire. The
cremated body is then filled in a jar to be kept close by the dear ones of the
deceased. Some of the dead ones, in their own lives, leave wills as to how they
would like their ashes to be disposed of. Some even wish for themselves to be
released in the space, some living in India wish for them to be flown
into the River Ganges or any other ocean and some wish for them to be kept
close by their relatives.
4. Strangulation
This modern practice has derived ideas from the ancient
ritual of Sati. The traditional funeral ceremony on the South Pacific Island of
Fiji involves killing of the near and dear ones of the deceased. The practice
implies that the dead ones should not be left alone in the other world and must
be accompanied by a loved one in the hereafter so as to make the process of
death less painful.
3. Cannibalism
One of the most bizarre funeral traditions from Papua New Guinea and Brazil in which the community
feasted upon the deceased’s body. Now rarely practiced, this inhuman practice
probably arose from malnourished nations who sought other methods to feed
themselves. Cannibalism thus left any need for disposing of any body. The
deceased one’s family used to gather around the dead body and used fire and
other basic tools to make it edible. It is also known to be practiced in
nations who primarily survived in the jungles with not much to eat except herbs
and plants.
2. Sky Burial
One of the most bizarre funeral traditions still in
practice. Sky burial or ritual dissection is a funerary practice in the Chinese
provinces of Tibet, Qinghai, and Inner Mongolia.
A human corpse is cut into small pieces and placed on a mountaintop, exposing
it to the elements (mahabhuta) and animals – especially predatory birds. The
function of the sky burial is simply to dispose of the remains in as generous a
way as possible. The majority of Tibetans and many Mongolians adhere to
Vajrayana Buddhism, which teaches the transmigration of spirits. They believed
that there is no need to preserve the body, as it is now an empty vessel. Birds
may eat it or nature may cause it to decompose.
1. Sati
Sati is a very old tradition from the religion of Hinduism,
which is rarely practiced nowadays. Sati was a sort of punishment given to a
woman whose husband has died, i.e. it primarily involved widows. Not only
Hindus, but some other cultures are also known to practice this tradition. The
widow was forced to burn herself as a way to sacrifice herself to the mighty
powers in respect of her husband’s death. The main reason of this ritual
practice could be that an alone woman has no place in this world after her
husband’s death and she must sacrifice herself willingly before the Gods.
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