Your cunt

Your cunt

How does your cuntry treat the dead?


>Flag
>We bury them on cementaries and pray for their wellbeing.
>Visit the graves at All Saints and light cementery candles on them. Some people bring flowers, too.
>There also massive stone tables where people light candles for those who are buried too far to visit

>have a church ceremony with some shitty songs
>burn them and disperse their ashes
>or bury them and lay down some flowers
>after 10 years we dig them up and throw them in a pit
>if the family pays up you can stay in your grave for a maximum of 20 years

Those terms aren't entirely correct. You can't extend normal public grave rights.

Only in a private grave you can extend it for a couple years if the family keeps paying.

Here we have more or "family graves".
I'm not sure how they do it technically, but sometimes there are many generations buried in one grave.

>pray for the soul
>3 meters deep, no more than 24 hours.
>stand up comedy night every 3,7,40,100 days after the decease.

>stand up comedy night every 3,7,40,100 days after the decease.
Explain?

takziah, where an imam gave condolence speech and preach in 3rd 7th 40th and 100th night.

then thanks to liberalization of islam in here, it turns into humor party so the family of decease not feel sad anymroe.

Depends on how much money you have.
Like with everything else.

Huh usually we just hang out with the deceased family members with pots, pans and cooking materials to cook noodle soup or other simple meals together beforereciting prayers.
Then its usual socialising and eating.
Then several hundred years later some weird cult took your gravestone, we had several weird chinese cult who worship ancient graves and burial sites of 2000yr old dead cities for lottery number.

These days it's mostly just cremation and burying the urn, simply because it's more convenient. Used to be a bit different.

Alright, so somebody died, what do?

>cover all the mirrors in the home so the spirit doesn't get lost on its way out
>close eyes, shut the mouth and tie the jaw off, so it doesn't slack before rigor mortis sets in
>call the authorities to take the body away and get it prepped
>cry like a bitch and try to get some sleep, unless you're a man
>men don't cry su just stare at the ceiling in silence
>go to the church and pick up some blessed candles
>the body is put on display at the funeral hall for three days, so everyone who wants to say goodbye can make it
>relatives stay at the funeral home overnight with the body
>on the third day body is moved to a church
>mass is held
>funeral procession slowly moves to the graveyard
>songs sung
>priest blesses the grave
>relatives toss some dirt unto the casket and it gets burried

Cont'd
>put down some flowers and light candles
>everyone is invited to eat the last meal
>two courses, alcohol optional, but usually present
>talk about the deceased, catch up with distant relatives
>afterwards come home and burn the rest of the candles you got from the church
>order a headstone made, or if its a family grave, then just carve a new name and date
>after 4 weeks pass you order another mass at the church
>you can get rid off the deceased stuff now, give away clothes etc
>after one year there's another memorial dinner, but only close relatives and friends come
>afterwards just light a candle each year
>also put candles/flowers on the grave on all dead day
And that's pretty much it. I don't think there's any limit on how long you can have a grave, since I've family graves from ~1800. You just have to wait for a few years between burials.

Cemeteries on all Saints after sunset look p chill 2bh.

It's quite similar to here, aside from the mirror covering part and sharing deceased's stuff
The deceased's stuff is either shared based on the testimony or deceased's closest family settle it themselves
True

It's not the inheritance I was talking about. Its just a custom where you're supposed to wait four weeks before throwing away the deceased persons stuff. Old clothes, linen, etc. Stuff nobody wants.
As for inheritance, if there's no testament, everything goes to the spouse, then children, then parents, then siblings, the cousins and so on... You have three months to make your claims or it goes to the state. If you miss that term you can get it back, but it gets more complicated.

we erect a balbal and throatsing for 40 days at the gravesite. then a horse is slaughtered and a feast is given to the tribe.

My family's Polish, and whenever someone over there dies they do cover the mirrors until the body is removed from the house.

It's an old superstition, I wouldn't be surprised if it's not all that common anymore.

>mfw after posting ITT I googled some of the customs and found out jews have the same ones
Specifically the mirrors and candle burning after returning from cemetary. Something tells me that our flavor of catholicism isn't exactly proper.

We throw them at the sea in places without beaches so no tourists come there and wait until the police finds them too decomposed to be recognized easily.

If you ever went to Rio, you bathed yourself in dead meat.

>superstition
implying ghosts don't get trapped in mirrors

I don't know, do they? Is it just the jew ghosts or do regular ghosts get trapped as well?

Regular ghosts. Jews don't have a soul, so they don't get trapped, they tend to become vampires though. Souls-sucking goys dry is habit that literally refuses to die.

we incinerate them and put their ashes in a pot and then we throw the ashes somewhere and then we never speak of them again

I remember seeing these illuminated cemeteries in Poland last year. It's pretty cool and I hope you guys keep doing that. It's very uncommon do to that here, but in my family we light candles on Christmas Eve for our deceased.

If a person passes away in a Danish hospital, the nurses stop the clock in the patient's room and puts it down. They also open a window to supposedly free the soul. The doctor then keeps checking for vital life signs for 6 hours, after which the patient will be declared dead if no such signs are found. All family members can stay in the patient's room during this time if they want.

As for funerals, most people get cremated and more people choose to be buried in unmarked locations in recent years. The funeral is held at the church, 3-6 songs are sung by the family members, and afterwards the coffin is brought from inside the church to the hearse where the body will later be cremated. After the funeral, the family members, guests and the priest eat lunch together, and speeches are held for the deceased family member.