With gifts of flowers
You know, what they say - death is a part of life. Before I started working for funeral home directory, I was always history, music, art, and literature fan, over the years I built a close circle of friends who share same interests with me. I guess, this is why I want to write some blog entries about life and death and funeral traditions that vary all over the world. So people developed very interesting rituals in various cultures. I got somehow very passionate about these topics.
As you know, a funeral is a ceremony marking a person’s death. Funerary customs comprise the complex of beliefs and practices used by a culture to remember the dead, from the funeral itself, to various monuments, prayers, and rituals undertaken in their honor. These customs vary widely between cultures, and between religious affiliations within cultures. In some cultures the dead are venerated; this is commonly called ancestor worship. The word funeral comes from the Latin funus, which had a variety of meanings, including the corpse and the funerary rites themselves.
Funeral rites are as old as the human race itself, as well as other hominids. I read in a local library that in the Shanidar cave in Iraq, Neanderthal skeletons have been discovered with a characteristic layer of pollen, which suggests that Neanderthals buried the dead with gifts of flowers. Go figure! These Neanderthals also believed in an afterlife, and in any case were aware of their own mortality and were capable of mourning. Isn’t that something?