CONFUCIANISM
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Beliefs About
Death
Confucianism, like
Taoism, is not a religion but a philosophy. Death is the completion
of a life cycle. Death is viewed as a departing of the soul from its
body, hopefully only temporarily - like a dream. It is believed that
when a person dies he / she changes his or her living place from the
yang world to the yin world. For this to be accomplished, permission
must be obtained from the yin world. The rites of death have three parts:
the effort to recover the deceased, the mourning, and the funeral.
Rites
To avoid taking
a false death as a real one, the deceased's intimate would go up to
the roof from the front of the house, carrying the clothes of the deceased,
then faced north (the direction of the yin world) shouts three times,
"So and so, return!" He / She then quickly descends from the
back of the house with the clothes, which were believed to still be
carrying the wandering soul, to the body. If the person recovered then
the soul wandered to another world and was brought back. If there were
no recovery the mourning rites would begin.
After this kobok
ritual, the bereaved family members bathe the body and put on mourning
clothes called so'ngbok which differ in accordance with the relationship
with the deceased.
The family members
then formally receive condolence bearers. A ritual table is set up to
pay respect to the soul of the dead and a bier is prepared which will
be carried to the burial ground the following day.
On the following
day, the coffin is placed on the bier and a ritual called pal-inje
is performed before the bier is carried out to the gravesite. After
lowering the casket into the pit, pallbearers stamp on the grave to
pack the earth before returning. Traditionally, Confucianists have been
buried, but as burial space is becoming scarce in countries where Confucianism
is practiced, cremation is becoming more accepted.
Mourning
The mourning rites
are of supreme importance. Their exposition takes up the greater part
of the Li-ki". They are most elaborate, varying greatly in details
and length of observance, according to the rank and relationship of
the deceased. The mourning rites for the father are the most elaborate
of all. For the first three days, the son, clad in sackcloth of coarse
white hemp, fasts, leaps, and wails. After the burial, for which there
are many minute prescriptions, the son must wear the mourning sackcloth
for twenty-seven months, emaciating his body with scanty food, and living
in a rude hut erected for the purpose near the grave. In the 'Analects,'
Confucius is said to have condemned with indignation the suggestion
of a disciple that the period of the mourning rites might well be shortened
to one year.
References:
korea.insights.co.kr/passage/psg_e1.html
www.living4ever.net/apolog/confucianism.htm#Rites
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