BUDDHIST
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Beliefs About
Death
Buddhists believe
in reincarnation, that they are reborn when they die - depending on
their karma (the belief that all actions have either a good or bad effect
and will affect your next life). Breaking free of the cycle of reincarnation
is called Nirvana — the state of perfect peace and happiness, reached
by people that have realized the true meaning of life and gained enlightenment.
The Buddha taught that everything changes, nothing lasts forever and
that dying is part of the natural process of change.
Visitation
The night before
the funeral a wake is held at a temple or mortuary lasting from 1 —3
days (in Japan it would be held at the deceased person's home). Relatives
and friends spend this time praying for the repose of the departed.
The body is laid out with its head to the north and an alter, "butsudan',
is set up with fresh flowers, fruits, a bowl of water, incense and a
candle. A Buddhist priest will officiate at the service; and the deceased
is given a posthumous name, which is written on a wooden tablet. Visitors
greet the family, offer their condolences, and then go to the casket
and bow. They may then either stay and sit for a while or leave, according
to personal preference.
A Buddhist Funeral
Monks attend the
funeral to chant prayers and verses from the sacred texts. Everyone
repeats his or her commitment to the Three Jewels of Buddhism. These
are the Buddha, the dharma (his teaching) and the sangha (the Buddhist
community). They also recite the Five Precepts, or Promises, - Not to
harm living things, not to steal, have affairs, tell lies or take drugs
or alcohol.
The body is taken in the hearse and is brought to the crematorium. Buddhists
disapprove of any disposal method other than cremation. Traditionally,
as is the present case in Japan, friends and relatives will gather the
bone fragments with chopsticks and put them in an urn that is later
to be buried in a cemetery. Afterward they will have a refreshment feast,
where food and drink is offered to everyone.
Mourning
It is believed
that by the forty-ninth day after death, the karma of the deceased takes
a certain form. During these 49 days the family observes a mourning
period and they refrain from any merry-making. A memorial service is
held on the 49th day, the one-hundredth day, the first, third,
seventh, and twenty-third year anniversaries and ending on the thirty-third
year - at which time it is believed that the soul has been assimilated
into the collective ancestral soul.
References:
(Matsunami, Kodo, International Handbook of Funeral
Practices. Greenwood Press, 1998) (Ganeri, Anita, Journey's
End - Death and Mourning, Peter Bedrick Books. New York 1998)
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