FUNERALS

A funeral (matakicca) is a ceremony related to disposing of the body of someone who has died. Funerals for ordinary people at the time of the Buddha were fairly simple. Four men would carry the body to the charnel ground followed by a procession of relatives and friends who would be carrying torches and weeping and wailing (Ja.VI,464; Sn.580; Tha.779). The usual way of disposing of the body was by cremation or exposure to the elements. If the first of these was done, the body was placed on the pyre, flowers, incense and garlands were placed on the body, the participants circumambulated the pyre three times and then it was ignited. On the 12th or sometimes the 13th day after the death, the saddha ceremony was held where food, clothing and other gifts were given to brahmins   in the name of the deceased (A.I,166; D.I,97).

The Buddha's funeral was arranged by the Mallas, the people of Kusinàrà, and was conducted in a way similar to the royal funerals described in the Ràmàyana and other later literature. The Mallas erected tents and awnings and spent several days honouring the Buddha's body with incense and garlands and to the accompaniment of music and dancing. After six days of this, they washed their heads, dressed in new clothes and then put the body in an iron coffin, smeared it with oil and wrapped it in several layers of fine cloth (D.II,159-60).  The body was then taken through the town, out through the east gate rather than the south gate as was the norm, and cremated. The ashes of eminent people were usually interned under an earthen mound (thåpa), often situated at a crossroads. In the case of the Buddha, his ashes were divided into eight, each portion being placed in such a mound.

Today, different Buddhist cultures conduct their funerals in different ways, from simple and dignified as in Sri Lanka, to elaborate and colorful as in Thailand. In China and Vietnam, the bodies of esteemed monks are sometimes mummified, and in Tibet, the bodies of ordinary people are sometimes dismembered and fed to vultures and dogs. See Doõa, Grief and Ståpa.