Sky burial

A sky burial site in Yerpa Valley, Tibet
Drigung Monastery, Tibetan monastery famous for performing sky burials

Sky burial (Tibetan: བྱ་གཏོར་, Wylie: bya gtor, lit. "bird-scattered"[1]) is a funeral practice in which a human corpse is placed on a mountaintop to decompose while exposed to the elements or to be eaten by scavenging animals, especially carrion birds like vultures and corvids. Comparable excarnation practices are part of Zoroastrian burial rites where deceased are exposed to the elements and scavenger birds on stone structures called Dakhma.[2] Sky burials are endemic to Tibet, Qinghai, Sichuan, and Inner Mongolia, as well as in Mongolia, Nepal, Bhutan, and parts of India such as Sikkim and Zanskar.[3] The locations of preparation and sky burial are understood in the Vajrayana Buddhist traditions as charnel grounds. Few such places remain operational today, as the Chinese Communist Party initially banned the practice completely during the Cultural Revolution as feudal superstition, and continues to restrict the practice due to its allegations of decimation of vulture populations.[4][5]

The majority of Tibetan people and many Mongols adhere to Vajrayana Buddhism, which teaches the transmigration of spirits. There is no need to preserve the body, as it is now an empty vessel. Birds may eat it or nature may cause it to decompose. The function of the sky burial is simply to dispose of the remains in as generous a way as possible (the origin of the practice's Tibetan name). In much of Tibet and Qinghai, the ground is too hard and rocky to dig a grave, and due to the scarcity of fuel and timber, sky burials were typically more practical than the traditional Buddhist practice of cremation, which has been limited to high lamas and some other dignitaries.[6]

Other nations which performed air burial were the Caucasus nations of Georgians, Abkhazians, and Adyghe people, in which they put the corpse in a hollow tree trunk.[7][8]

  1. ^ Lamb, Robert (July 25, 2011), "How Sky Burial Works", How Stuff Works, archived from the original on May 20, 2024, retrieved August 12, 2024
  2. ^ "Zoroastrian Funerals", BBC, October 2, 2009, archived from the original on August 5, 2024, retrieved August 12, 2024
  3. ^ Sulkowsky, Zoltan (December 1, 2013) [Originally published 2008], Around the World on a Motorcycle, Center Conway, NH: Whitehorse Press, p. 114, ISBN 978-1-884313-55-4
  4. ^ Faison, Seth (July 3, 1999), "Lirong Journal; Tibetans, And Vultures, Keep Ancient Burial Rite", The New York Times, para. 13, archived from the original on August 9, 2023
  5. ^ MaMing, Roller; Lee, Li; Yang, Xiaomin; Buzzard, Paul (March 29, 2018), "Vultures and Sky Burials on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau", Vulture News, 71 (1): 22, doi:10.4314/vulnew.v71i1.2, ISSN 1606-7479
  6. ^ "Sky Burial", Travel China Guide, March 20, 2019, archived from the original on May 15, 2024, retrieved August 12, 2024
  7. ^ История Грузии (in Russian), retrieved August 12, 2024[dead link]
  8. ^ Описание Колхиды Или Мингрелии (in Russian), archived from the original on April 19, 2023, retrieved August 12, 2024

Sky burial

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