As part of a ritual to show ‘love and respect, The Torajan
people of Indonesia proudly display their dead relatives after digging them up
and dressing them in new clothes in an ancient ritual every three years.
The
ritual, which translates as ‘The Ceremony of Cleaning Corpses,’ has been going for more than a century.
One
of the most important events in the lives of the Torajan people, an ethnic
group indigenous to the mountainous region of Tana Toraja, is the funeral.
Most
save money their entire lives so they can have a respectable burial for
themselves or family members.
In
some cases the deceased’s funeral is held several weeks or even years after
their death so the family have can have time to save up and pay for an
extravagant funeral.
Another important element
of the Ma’nene festival is replacing and repairing the coffins to stop bodies
from decomposing.
The Torajan people live
high in the mountains of Sulawesi in Indonesia. The area is so remote that many
of the villages were completely autonomous until the 1970s, when the area was
exposed to the outside world by Dutch missionaries.
The villagers are
encouraged to marry within their family – but only beyond the fourth cousin.
In the Torajan belief
system, death is not a final step, but just one step in an ongoing spiritual
life.


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