This is a Journal entry by Zarquon's Singing Fish!
Honouring the ancestors and a funeral custom
Zarquon's Singing Fish! Started conversation Sep 9, 2017
Ay my last t'ai chi lesson, I asked a question, which led to the teacher telling us two things about Chinese customs relating to death. The first was a ceremony she still does when attending a funeral. Before she leaves the house, she gets a box of matches and covers it with newspapers and leaves it outside the front door. On returning from the funeral, she unwraps the matches, lights a match and sets fire to the paper. Then when it's burned and still smoking, she steps over it before entering the house to prevent spirits entering the home. I said I thought it was a bit like smudging to cleanse and purify.
The second was about the ancestor shrine and how all the members of the family were honoured. Twice a year, there is a celebration where people bring food and drink and burn paper money and then eat the food. My teacher knows her ancestry for 600 years, which is pretty incredible. Apparently one of her ancestors was a governor/general of Hong Kong.
In the west, we hardly know past our grandparents.
Honouring the ancestors and a funeral custom
Galaxy Babe - eclectic editor Posted Nov 22, 2017
Wow, that's very interesting. I'm not sure about setting fire to stuff, especially so near to my house I get nervous lighting my candles and there are people I know who should never be allowed anywhere near matches!
I managed to trace my family back to the 19th Century but then couldn't decide which line to go back, my cousin got to the 18th Century but he had done his mother's line, no relation to me so couldn't share
Hope you are well, and little
Key: Complain about this post
Honouring the ancestors and a funeral custom
More Conversations for Zarquon's Singing Fish!
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."