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Fishead soup
Joined: 24 Jun 2007 Location: Korea
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Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2009 4:53 pm Post subject: Sky Burial |
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A Sky Burial allows the remains of the deceased to re-enter the food chain. Currently there are two kinds of sky burials performed. One is by Farsi's in Mumbai in India. The body is tied to the Towers of Silence where vultures pick away at the remains.
In Tibetan Buddhism the body is taken to a high place where it is cut up and fed to the vultures.
Personally I think this is awesome. |
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Chris_Dixon
Joined: 09 Jan 2008
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Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2009 7:06 pm Post subject: |
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Vultures arent the most angelic animal???
It seems pretty savage to me really. They are friggen dirty, ugly animals....And yay at being the one to slice up the body and feed them.
I think there are better ways to enter the food chain. |
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Chris_Dixon
Joined: 09 Jan 2008
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Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2009 7:10 pm Post subject: |
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"In one account, the leading rogyapa cut off the limbs and hacked the body to pieces, handing each part to his assistants, who used rocks to pound the flesh and bones together to a pulp, which they mixed with tsampa (barley flour with tea and yak butter or milk) before the vultures were summoned to eat.
In several accounts, the flesh was stripped from the bones and given to vultures without further preparation; the bones then were broken up with sledgehammers, and usually mixed with tsampa before being given to the vultures. Many rogyapa first feed the bones and cartilage to the vultures, keeping the best flesh until last. After having had their fill of good quality meat, the birds usually fly away - leaving the bones and less favored bits."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_burial |
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RACETRAITOR
Joined: 24 Oct 2005 Location: Seoul, South Korea
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Posted: Wed Feb 11, 2009 7:36 pm Post subject: |
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You forgot the part that the monks generally sing and be merry while they dismember the corpse with axes and pound the harder to digest parts with mallets.
It's all very black metal. |
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Troll_Bait

Joined: 04 Jan 2006 Location: [T]eaching experience doesn't matter much. -Lee Young-chan (pictured)
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Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2009 12:37 am Post subject: |
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When you live on a rocky mountain with no soil for burials and no trees for cremations, you have to get creative. |
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Chris_Dixon
Joined: 09 Jan 2008
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Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2009 2:10 am Post subject: |
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Troll_Bait wrote: |
When you live on a rocky mountain with no soil for burials and no trees for cremations, you have to get creative. |
Indeed, i totally understand how it came to be, and the traditions that surround it.... |
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hungrybeaver
Joined: 09 Jul 2007
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Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2009 7:08 am Post subject: |
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I've heard the lyrics to the songs the monks sing are about such fun things as impermanence and the nature of life and death, the fact that everyone suffers, karma, and the preciousness of life.
Sounds like a real party. |
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jvalmer

Joined: 06 Jun 2003
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Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2009 4:43 pm Post subject: |
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I believe there is a native tribe in Alberta that used to practice sky burials, way back. But, when the euros arrived, they put a stop to it. |
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Underwaterbob

Joined: 08 Jan 2005 Location: In Cognito
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Posted: Thu Feb 12, 2009 6:10 pm Post subject: |
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Burial at sea. There's plenty in the ocean willing to eat a human corpse. |
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