Indonesia's Death Ritual or Ma'nene One of Indonesia's largest i slands, Sulawesi, is home to the Toraja people, who are renowned for their complex funeral rites that involve both exhuming and preserving the deceased. Every three or five years in August, a rite known as Ma'nene entails exhuming the corpses of deceased family members, cleaning and redressing them, and lighting cigarettes in their mouths. They mummify the bodies of the dead and treat them as though they were still alive, providing them food, clothing, water, and tobacco. The ceremony, performed in August, is predicated on the idea that life continues after death. By exhuming, dressing, and bringing preserved bodies from a burial cave, Torajans honor spirits and make gifts. They hold the view that after being immortalized, spirits remain in the physical world until burial rites and then depart for spirit land. In order to conserve money for a lavish funeral, families store the remains. Ma'nene tradit
Comments
Post a Comment