PDA

View Full Version : Strange funeral customs



Chuck Bao
3/27/2006, 08:00 AM
I attended a funeral service of my best friend on Saturday. It was a Buddhist service and a bit different from the Oklahoma variety.

The casket arrived at the crematorium in the back of a pickup truck. The procession led by monks and followed by friends and family circled the crematorium three times.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/threetimesaroundthecrematoriumresized.jpg

After hauling the casket up the stairs to the crematorium, they strung a cord from the casket into a nearby pavilion for the eulogy, merit-making and final blessings.

I was amazed that almost everyone knew the Pali chants by heart. I've never seen that. Instead of having 10 monks chanting in unison, it was multiplied 10 times with everyone chanting in near perfect pitch. It made my hair stand up, I guess, like 100 people singing Amazing Grace a cappella would.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/prayersresized.jpg

Meanwhile, a few men were chopping coconuts near the crematorium. Coconut juice is poured over the body prior to the cremation. I think that helps improve the smell.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/choppingcoconutsresized.jpg

Later they passed out paper flowers and incense. People filed by one-by-one and put the paper flowers inside the casket. Buddhists use the funeral rite as an important lesson that death is part of the cycle of life and shouldn’t be feared.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/paperflowers26incenseresized.jpg

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/placingpaperflowersandincenseinsidecasketresized.j pg

I was given a plastic jug of coconut juice to pour on the body. As I was pouring the last of it on his head, I couldn't stand that, so I wipped it off his brow and forehead.

As they pushed the casket inside the crematorium, closed the door and lit the fire, they let off fireworks and threw candy out into the crowd. The crowd was calling for the candy, just as they starting throwing it, someone set off the biggest, loudest firecracker that was somehow set off down a guide wire over the crowd. Everyone ducked and ran and then they realized that they had been tricked and started laughing and picking up candy again.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/fireworksandthrowingcandyresized.jpg

Then everyone left except for a few of us.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/cremation2resized.jpg

The close friends and family had one more thing to do - burn his clothes and some of his favorite personal belongings just behind the crematorium.

Honestly, I don't know why they did this. I guess it was to give him something to wear or his favorite things in the afterlife.

I brought an OU baseball cap to burn. He always loved wearing my OU caps. He wasn’t really an OU fan and I think he just liked the crimson color.

We poured coconut juice on the pile and set it on fire. We had to keep raking it for an hour or so, so it would keep burning. With just the few of us staying and saying goodbye, I felt release and I’m thankful for that.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/burningclothesresized.jpg

Sooner Born Sooner Bred
3/27/2006, 08:18 AM
Sorry for your loss. I think it is interesting how different cultures deal with death.

Sooner Born Sooner Bred
3/27/2006, 08:33 AM
What does that banner say?
http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/choppingcoconutsresized.jpg

Chuck Bao
3/27/2006, 08:47 AM
I don't have a close up of the full banner. It seems to be an advertisement of sponsor with telephone number.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/casketdonationresized.10743904.jpg

Sooner Born Sooner Bred
3/27/2006, 09:19 AM
Interesting. I thought maybe it was one of those like we have in America that say Father or Son or Grandmother on them.

Chuck Bao
3/27/2006, 09:36 AM
Okay, I just called that number (it is 9:30pm here). The woman that answered the cell phone said that they make cloth funeral pyre wreaths. Maybe it wasn't entirely appropriate and the family could have taken the ad out.

They didn't and it didn't last long anyway.

More Buddhist philosophy, maybe. Advertisement isn't permanant.

OUDoc
3/27/2006, 09:53 AM
So they forgot to take the tag off?

Interesting pictures. Sorry about your friend.

Chuck Bao
3/27/2006, 10:23 AM
I didn't watch that part.

I just assume that they removed the plastic covering on the thing. I mean there's no point of making a cloth wreath if you're putting in it the crematorium with the plastic still on it. The paper ad may or may not fall off. Anyway, it would burn good.

The other wreaths, more traditional, had that loving son, father and friend. This is a pic of the casket inside the family home.

http://img5.ranchoweb.com/images/kanunu/casketinhomeresized.jpg

mrowl
3/27/2006, 10:25 AM
thanks for sharing, thats cool to see.

Sorry about your friend