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Where will you find sky burials and what has tsampa and the vultures to do with it ?
Question
#109102. Asked by snuiteke. (Sep 24 09 2:53 AM)
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22crows
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Sky burial or ritual dissection was once a common funerary practice in Tibet wherein a human corpse is cut in specific locations and placed on a mountaintop, exposing it to the elements or the mahabhuta and animals – especially to birds of prey. In Tibet the practice is known as jhator (Tibetan: བྱ་གཏོར་; Wylie: bya gtor), which literally means, "giving alms to the birds."
The majority of Tibetans adhere to Buddhism, which teaches rebirth. There is no need to preserve the body, as it is now an empty vessel. Birds may eat it, or nature may let it decompose. So the function of the sky burial is simply the disposal of the remains. In much of Tibet the ground is too hard and rocky to dig a grave, and with fuel and timber scarce, a sky burial is often more practical than cremation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sky_burial
(some graphic pictures here)
Read about the tsampa and the vultures under the heading "Disassembling the body"
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