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NSFW: Fed to the Vultures… Tibetan Sky Burial

All humans must die, but how we approach that death is subject to the culture we live in. In the west, we fear death deeply, and as such have a million ways to stave off our demise. We would rather keep a soulless corpse hooked up to a machine than let nature take its course. Elsewhere in the world, like in Tibet, death is treated with respect and as a passage that we all must journey through to our next life. Tibetan Buddhists follow the guidance of their death handbook, the Bardo Thodol, a guide to the stages of death and the pathway to reincarnation written in the 8th century CE. But this journey is for the soul, not for the body, which is just the soft shell we are encased in. Unlike the Christian traditions that many western nations have founded their death practices on, which speak of resurrection of the intact body, in Tibet the body is seen as part of nature’s cycle and not the human it once was.

During a Sky Burial, the corpse is given to the creatures of the sky – the vultures – in a ritual called jhator. In smaller villages, the corpse is carried by a friend or family member to an area where it is left exposed for scavengers to eat. In larger communities, there are lama burial masters or rogyapa, basically the Tibetan equivalent of a grave digger – but instead of digging graves, their job is to butcher corpses. There is a designated site for the burial, high in the mountains, known as the dürtro, and once the corpse has arrived, the lama or the rogyapa begins breaking the body down. Juniper is burned to attract the vultures, and then the body is sliced and flayed, limbs removed and bones crushed, so that when the vultures begin their feast they are able to consume the entire corpse, leaving nothing behind to rot. What to another culture would be seen as a desecration or even a psychotic act, in Tibet is a practice that is sacred and essential. When you think about how this works – the dead body given as an offering to creatures that will be nourished by it, who will consume it and use it to soar high above the Himalayas – the practice of buying a fancy, embossed and silk-lined casket to rot in, useless to the world around you, seems wasteful and ridiculous. Only human beings would decide that unlike every other creature on the planet, our bodies are too special for anybody to eat. Below, watch a video of the process of jhator and check out some stunning photos of a sky burial taken by Bo Løvschall – warning, they are graphic!

Source: http://people.howstuffworks.com/culture-traditions/cultural-traditions/sky-burial.htm

All Photos Below by Bo Løvschall via GlobeSpots.com

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15 Comments

15 Comments

  1. Jason

    January 9, 2015 at 3:10 pm

    Wow, how edgy of you CLVT! Yeah, lets treat disgusting cultural practices as though they are sacred and inscrutable.

  2. Marilyn Demetrioff Brown

    December 2, 2014 at 9:21 pm

    You have to be nuts…really…..that is sick…sorry…it shows no respect…your whole life lived on earth and then given to vultures at your time of death…vultures are scavengers…and you would feel good having that eat you….give your heads a shake…either you had too much smoke or ate too many brownies….I knew our younger generation had issues…but this …..??? You’re a sad bunch…..

    • CVLT Nation

      December 3, 2014 at 11:31 am

      I think you missed the part about this being an ancient Tibetan Buddhist practice…it’s hardly a “popular trend” among the “younger generation”! Since the body is an empty vessel, it’s fed back to nature rather than pumped full of chemicals and preserved in a box. And why the hate on scavengers? You have to admit, if human beings were scavengers, the planet would be in a far better place today! Our massive agricultural systems are destroying the planet’s systems and pushing Earth’s creatures to rapid extinction – including our own extinction.

    • wanda

      December 4, 2014 at 6:36 am

      There’s nothing sick about this. Your brainwashed western mind has some weird tie to the body after life has left it. This is amazing and incredibly respectful of the earth.

    • Tyler Drainville

      February 20, 2015 at 1:46 pm

      It’s clear you either didn’t read the article at all or you are misunderstanding everything that is sacred to eastern cultures.

    • Alexandra Ribeiro Carvalho

      February 20, 2015 at 3:08 pm

      To you and that Jason guy, yeah, cause it’s fundamentally different having your corpse being eaten away by worms, bacteria and other saprotrophs rather than by scavengers. Not. Nothing is lost, nothing is created, everything is transformed. Ultimately, it really doesn’t matter who transforms who. And for fuck’s sake, it’s just a shell, a meat suit… It’s not YOU.
      Oh, and let’s totally disrespect an ancient culture just cause we don’t *get it* and find it gross, while also imposing our most narrow-minded and obtuse western/christianized beliefs. Does it even cross your mind that tibetans might find burying a corpse six-feet under revolting?!

  3. Marnie Brown

    December 2, 2014 at 7:46 pm

    Ughhh!! Yeah leave the body but the hacking just a little bit too much!!

  4. Guillaume Cazalet

    December 2, 2014 at 2:11 pm

    Gabriel Tapia

  5. Xavier Boucherat

    December 2, 2014 at 11:48 am

    sign me up asap

  6. Chris Whitehead

    December 2, 2014 at 10:27 am

    Closest thing available in US is a body farm http://www.txstate.edu/anthropology/facts/

  7. Dana Cramblett

    December 2, 2014 at 6:51 am

    I agree, but I am not hacking you to pieces & crushing your bones. We’ll have to find someone to do it for us.

  8. Todd Cramblett

    December 2, 2014 at 6:28 am

    When my time comes I would like this to be how my dead body is given to this great planet for letting me enjoy it!

  9. Eli Weasel

    December 2, 2014 at 1:10 am

    Incredible

  10. Eli Weasel

    December 2, 2014 at 1:09 am

    Wow

  11. Iain Garvie

    December 2, 2014 at 12:44 am

    Very graphic indeed!

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