• Explore Vox
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Life
  • Music
  • News & Politics
  • Technology
  • Join Vox
  • Take a Tour
  • Already a Member? Sign in
egabriel
egabriel’s blog
  • egabriel’s Blog
  • Profile
  • Neighbors
  • Photos
  • More 
    • Audio
    • Videos
    • Books
    • Links
    • Collections

5 posts from October 2008

  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December

Part of the cycle of human life

  • Oct 28, 2008
  • 1 comment

As I already mentioned, I am engaged in a lot of researches based on history and culture of various nations. I have to travel a lot because my assignments and research differ. For example, recently, my employer - funeral home directory asked me to find out more about Sikh funeral traditions. Here is what I found in brief.

In Sikhism death is considered to be a natural process. An event that only happens as a direct result of God’s will. To a Sikh, birth and death are closely associated, because they are both part of the cycle of human life which is seen as transient stage towards Liberation, complete unity with God. Sikhs also believe in reincarnation. The soul itself is not subject to the cycle of birth and death. Death is only the progression of the soul on its journey from God, through the created universe and back to God again.

The public display of grief at the funeral, such as wailing or crying out loud is discouraged and should be kept to a minimum. Cremation is the preferred funeral method of, although if this is not possible any other methods such as burial at sea are acceptable. Worship of the dead with gravestones, etc. is discouraged, because the body is considered to be only the shell and the person’s soul is their real essence.

On the day of the cremation, the body is taken to the home where hymns, the Sikh Scriptures are recited by the congregation, which induce feeling of consolation and courage. The relatives of the deceased recite sitting near the coffin. At the conclusion of the service, the coffin is taken to the cremation site. The ashes are later collected and spread in the nearest river. Sikhs do not erect monuments over the remains of the dead.

1 comment Tags: death, history, life, soul, natural, funeral, worship, process …

With gifts of flowers

  • Oct 28, 2008
  • Post a comment

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?

Post a comment Tags: gifts, death, culture, flowers, life, tradition, beliefs, funeral …

All attempts ended in vain

  • Oct 9, 2008
  • 1 comment

I found an interesting story about another lost land while doing my web analytics research. This legend surfaced in Canada during French colonization in the the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. French colonists in North America learned from Algonquin Indians that somewhere in the north, there was a mythical kingdom which is inhabited by blond men rich with gold and furs. Algonquin Indians even had a name for this land - Kingdom of Saguenay. One of the Indian Chiefs named Donnacona also told a lot of stories about this kingdom while being imprisoned in France in the 30s of the sixteenth century. Donnaconna claimed that blond inhabitants of the kingdom also have in their posession great mines of silver and gold.

French colonists tried hard to find kingdom of Saguenay, but all their attempts ended in vain. Up until now, specialists speculate about the source of this legend. Some even say that it was an ancient pre-Colombian settlement of Europeans. They believe that Indian oral tradition referred to Viking settlements in America, although this has not been definitely proven.

Nevertheless the name Saguenay exists in many modern canadian placenames. One of the regions in Quebec even refers to itself as Kingdom of Saguenay trying to attract tourists and for other marketing purposes.

1 comment Tags: ancient, lost, name, tradition, legend, gold, silver, source …

Theory of the common ancestry

  • Oct 9, 2008
  • Post a comment

Famous Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl wanted to test the legends and sailed the Kon-Tiki, a balsa-wood raft, from South America into the Pacific in 1947. By that expedition Thor tried to show that humans could have settled Polynesia from the eastern shores of the Pacific Ocean, with sailors using the prevailing winds and simple vessels.

Soon by using DNA, linguistic and archaeological evidence, scientists began to realize that the Austronesian-speaking peoples, including the Polynesians, probably originated from islands in eastern Asia, possibly from Taiwan, and moved southwards and eastwards through the South Pacific Ocean. The common ancestry of all the Austronesian languages supports this theory. At least some of the migration occurred against the prevailing winds and was deliberate migration rather than just accidental. Austronesian and Polynesian navigators may have deduced the existence of uninhabited islands by observing migratory patterns of birds.The possibility of such migration seems more likely in the view of recent research. More and more boat builders construct vessels by using traditional materials and techniques, sail them using ancient navigation methods.

Post a comment Tags: test, legends, theory, explorer, research, islands, scientists, ancestry …

Ancient oral traditions

  • Oct 9, 2008
  • Post a comment

It is very interesting phenomenon: mostly all Austronesian people, Including Polynesian trace their origin to some mystical land that they call Hawaiki. While doing my research for web analytics company, I found something else. Polynesian cultures have ancient oral traditions that say that they migrated from their homeland Hawaiki to the islands in the Pacific Ocean in open canoes. Maori people of New Zealand also trace their ancestry to groups of people who traveled from Hawaiki in open canoes.

In the same oral traditions the legendary land of Hawaiki also serves like some kind of place where the spirits of Polynesian people return to after death. In New Zealand Maori people even give possible pointers to the direction in which Hawaiki may like.

Before the advent of DNA analysis many anthropologists doubted that a deliberate migration in open canoes ever happened. They preferred to believe that the migration occurred accidentally when seafarers became lost and drifted to uninhabited shores.

Read on ...

Post a comment Tags: ancient, phenomenon, people, groups, interesting, islands, ancestry, land …

About Me

egabriel
United States
View my profile

My Links

  • AFG Solutions
  • Zorge.net
  • BestMausoleum.com
  • TopFamousComposers.com
  • FuneralWisdom.com

Neighborhood

  • Team Vox
    Team Vox Updated: Nov 17, 2009

Explore friends, family, friends & family, or entire neighborhood.

View my neighbors

Tags

  • ancient
  • belief
  • classical music
  • concept
  • evidence
  • history
  • kingdom
  • land
  • legend
  • legends
  • life
  • lost
  • magic
  • mysterious
  • mythical
  • myths
  • pirates
  • place
  • stories
  • tradition

View my tags

Archives

  • February 2009 (1)
  • December 2008 (3)
  • November 2008 (5)
  • October 2008 (5)
  • September 2008 (7)
  • 2009 (1)
  • 2008 (85)
  • 2007 (2)

Subscribe

  • Subscribe to this feed
  • Powered by Vox
  • Theme designed by Sara Showalter
  • Use this theme
  • Home
  • Explore
  • Tour Vox
  • Start a Vox Blog
Already a member? Sign in

Back to top

View Vox in your language: English | Español | Français | 日本語

Brought to you by Six Apart, creators of Movable Type, Vox and TypePad.
Six Apart Services: Blogs | Free Blogs | Content Management | Advertising

Vox © 2003-2008 Six Apart, Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Help | Learn More | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Copyright | Advertise | Get a Free Vox Blog

Loading…

Adding this item will make it viewable to everyone who has access to the group.

Adding this post, and any items in it, will make it viewable to everyone who has access to the group.

Create a link to a person
Search all of Vox
Your Neighborhood
People on Vox

(Select up to five users maximum)

Vox Login

You've been logged out, please sign in to Vox with your email and password to complete this action.

Email:
Password:
 
Embed a Widget
Widget Title: This is optional
Widget Code: Insert outside code here to share media, slideshows, etc. Get more info
OK Cancel

We allow most HTML/CSS, <object> and <embed> code

Processing...
Processing
Message
Confirm
Error
Remove this member