Recount Text My Grandpa’s Funeral in Toraja
My Grandpa’s Funeral in Toraja
Last
month my family and I went to Toraja to attend Grandpa’s funeral. It
was my first time to go to such a ceremony. We gathered there with our
kin in the ceremony.
Overall,
the ceremony was quite elaborate. It took about a week. Several days
before the ceremony was done, grandpa’s body was kept in a series of
houses arranged in a circular row around an open field called tongkonan.
His corpse was dressed in a fine wearing.
The funeral was
performed in two phases. First, we slaughtered the pigs and buffaloes,
and then moved the corpse to face north. In this ceremony we wore black
clothes. After that, the corpse was placed in a sandal wood coffin.
Then, it was brought out of the house and placed on an open platform
beneath the granary. Meanwhile, my uncle, my brother, and I prepared the
wooden puppet and a funeral tower called lakian. The next phase of the
ceremony was held in this place. The coffin is borne from the house and
placed in the lakian. During the day, there were also buffalo matches.
They were great matches. In the night, we were feasting, chanting, and
dancing.
On the last day, the grandpa’s coffin
were lowered from the funeral tower and brought up to the mountain side
family graveyard. It was followed by great shouting and excitement from
the relatives and the guests. Finally, we installed the wooden puppet on
a high balcony where other puppets representing the members of a whole
family were already there. The funeral ceremonies made my family and me
tired. However, we were grateful because it ran smoothly.
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