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Jean-Marc MICHEL | profile | all galleries >> Indonesia >> Sulawesi >> Toraja Funerals tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Toraja Funerals

The area of central Sulawesi whose capital is Rantepao, is to visit a funeral. This is easier than it sounds: because the funeral celebrations take a lot of preparation, not to mention expense, the Torajans have two funerals for each death. The first one is a private affair straight away after the death, and the body is preserved in the house where it died until the necessary cash has been saved up for the second one, a much bigger, more public affair.

Among the Torajan, no other celebration is as important as the one celebrating the passage from this world into the next one. Births and birthdays are practically non-events, and weddings pale in comparison. When someone dies, the body is usually kept in the bedroom, with the family sleeping alongside the coffin. Once everything is ready, preparations are begun for the funeral party. Funerals are usually held during the dry season, from July to September. This is when the farming families will have the time as well as when the weather will be at its best.
For the funeral, a set of temporary structures will be built in an open filed near the family compound, or sometimes the structures are built between and around the permanent buildings to enclose a group of family houses. In either case, the temporary structures will form an enclosed courtyard. Most of the buildings will be nothing more than simple covered viewing platforms where guests can sit to observe the "festivities". The family of the deceased as well as close friends will essentially live on these platforms for the length of the funeral, which can last from three to seven days, depending on the importance of the dead person. The headman of the village talks during one day of the ceremony.
The deceased, as honored guest, gets their own elaborate high platform from which to watch the show.

The ceremony itself consists mostly of the sacrifice of pigs and buffaloes. Although ostensibly Christian, the Torajan still believe that the deceased needs the animals in the afterlife to carry them to heaven. The number of buffaloes slaughtered will also depend on the importance of the person who died. As many as 24 of the huge beasts may be killed for the most important people.
The animals are butchered before the gathered crowd, and the meat may be given away or sometimes auctioned off, with the proceeds going to the church and to pay taxes. In order to curb excesses, the government put a tax on each buffalo slain. While the carving up proceeds, many ceremonies will have loudspeakers with a running commentary.
After the funeral, the family buried the dearly departed, and Torajan graves are just as distinctive as their funerals.

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