Death
And Cremation
Strange
as it seems, it is in their creamation
ceremonies that the Balinese have
their greatest fun. A.cremation is an occasion for gaiety
and not for mourning, since it represents the accomplishment
of their most sacred -duty: the ceremonial burning of the
corpses of the dead to liberate their souls so that they
can thus attain the higher worlds inid-befree for reincarnation
into better beings.
At
cremation ceremonies hundreds of people in a wild stampede
carry the beautiful towers, sixty feet high, solidly built
of wood and bamboo and decorated with tinsel and expensive
silks, in which the bodies are transported to the cremation
grounds. There the corpses are placed in great cows (hewn
out of tree-trunks to serve as coffins and covered with
precious ma. terials) , and cows, towers, offerings, and
ornaments are set on fire, hundreds and even thousands of
dollars burned in one afternoon in a mad splurge of extravagance
by a people who value the necessities of life in fractions
of pennies.
To
the Balinese, the material body is only the shell, the container
of the soul. This soul live in evry part of the body, even
in the hair and nails, but it is concentrated in the head
which is near-holy to them. A Balinese observes the rank
of his head inrelation to the rest of his body, and for
this reason no one would -stand on his head or take any
position that would place his feet on. a higher level. It
is an offence even to pat a small child on the head and
there is no worse insult than " I'll beat your head!
" One's soul wanders away during sleep (dreams arc
its travels and adventures), without becoming, however,
entirely detached from the body, and it is considered dangerous
to awaken a person too suddenly. Children are never beaten,
so as not to shock their tender, still undeveloped souls.
Madness,
epilepsy, and idiocy are the results of a bewitched soul,
but oedinary sickness is due to a weakened, polluted soul
rather than to mere physical causes. ' Life vanishes when
the soul, escapes from the body through the 'mouth, and
death occur's when it refuses to return. The relatives of
a dying man who has lost consciousness go to the temple
of the dead and, through a medium, beg the deities for the
release and return of his soul. By force of habit, the soul
lingers near the body when death comes, and. remains floating
in space or lives in a tree near by until,liberated by the
obliteration, of the corpse by the elements by earth, by
fire, and by water, to destroy the last unclean tie that.
binds the souls of the dead to this earth. By cremation
the soul is released to fly to the heavens for judgment
and return to be reborn into the dead man's grandchildren.
Failure to, liberate the soul by, neglecting to perform
the cremation or by incomplete or, improper rites would
force the soul to turn into a ghoset that would haunt the
careless descendants.
Cremation
rites were probably not introduced into Bali until the time
of majapahit, about. the'thirteenth century but the ancient
Balinese animists already, believed that their 'life-fluid
was immortal and that after death it returned to animate
other beings. They. Practiced the obliteration of the corpse
by 'burial or, as is still done in the primitive village
of Sembiran, simply by abandoning the. bodies in the forest
at the edge of a ravine to be eaten by wild animals. A man
in Bali is born into a superior state - a higher caste -.
if his behaviour on this earth has been good; otherwise
he will reincarnate into a lower.stage of life to begin
over again the progressive march towards.. ultimate perfection
Aman "who is guilty'of'serious- crimes is punished
by being reborn, often for periods of thousands of years,
into a tiger, a dog, a snake, a worm, or a poisonous mushroom.
Between
incarnations, until the time comes for its return to this.
earth, the soul goes to Indra's heaven, the swarga, a reservoir
where "life is just as in Bali, but devoid of all trouble
and illness." But this process does not go on forever;
when the individual has attained the highest', wisdom and
has reached the highest position among men, that of a Brahmana
who has been ordained as a priest, he hopes to obtain liberation
from this cycle of births. and become a god. The man of
low caste attributes his state to former misconduct, redeemable
in future lives only through a virtuous existence, which
entitles him to be reborn into a higher and higher caste.
A
mans life on this earth is but an incident in the long process
of the soul's evolution.
The
grand send-off of the soul into heaven, in the form of a
rich and complete cremation, is the life-ambition of every
Balinese. He looks forward to it, often making provision
during life with savings or property that can be pawned
or sold to finance his cremation. The greatest happiness
that comes to a Balinese -family, is to have, in this way,
accomplished the liberation of, the souls of their dead,
but complete cremation ceremonies are so costly that a family
of limited means have to wait often for years., haunted
by the fact that their dead are not yet cremated, and are
sometimes obliged to sacrifice their crops and their lands
in order to pay for the ceremonies. The expenses of, a cremation
are enormous; besides the priest's fees, the great amounts
of holy water used and the costly towers coffins offerings
and so forth there is the food and entertaiment provide
for days for the hundreds of guest and assistants that help
in the ceremonies
A
rich-cremation adds greatly to the prestige o a well-to-do
family, giving occasion for gay, extravagant festivities
that are eagerly anticipated despite the financial burden
they represent
A
good average for a great cremation is seldom thousand ringgits
or about two million kepengs (a ringgit is worth about one
gold dollar in normal exchange), but there:' cremations
of princes that cost as much as fifty thousand guilders
(at the time of writing, about twenty five thousand dollars
The
cremation of the mother of, Naseh, a former servant of'
ours, was the poorest we ever witnessed. She was burned
three days after her death with only the most essential
rites then the costs amounted to more than the, fifty Naseh
had succeeded in borrowing. A unique and rather ,improvised
cremation of a nobleman of Pemetjutan cost,only three hundred
and fifty guilders because the body had to be burnet on
the same day the death occurred and I was told. By relatives
that had the corpse been kept for the reglementary forty,
two days, the cremation would have cost over guilders. The
extraordinary decision to cremate. a, caste immediately
became possible only because the the community was preparing
for, their greatest in,a decade could not have taken place
bad there been an im, cremated corpse in the village. The
family was in difficult,financial circumstances and they.
welcomed the decision.
A
Brahmanic priest is essential to a, proper.crmation and
only the destitute would call upon a lesser priest,the quality
of the ceremonies the priest performs is determined by,
the to him. There is a choice of three kinds of cremation
utama the highest, costing an average of fifty dollars in,fees
for the priest alone; madia the medium class cremation for
about twenty-five dollars; and nista, the low for about
five dollars The rites for each are abaut-the same the difference
consisting in the quality and power of the magic formulas
and symbols and, the sort of holy water used, the credentials
given by, to the soul entering heaven, and the more or less
thorough purification of the soul.
It
is always a good resource, in a great cremation of to provide.
a retinue of souls for his trip into the beyond and to profit
at the same time by the magical and social advantages of
a more elegant cremation. In Krobokan we witnessed the release
Of two hundred and fifty souls of commoners who accompanied
a member. of the royal family. It is of extreme importance,
however, to keep within the rules prescribed for each caste,
the breach of which would bring dreadful punishment upon
guilty relatives who in their craving for ostentation should
use rites or materials for the accessories allotted to a
higher caste. These rules are at times infringed and it
becomes the source of malicious gossip if a family use a
cow instead of a lion to burn their deceased, or if they
have more roofs in their tower than is their right. In a
few cases the right of cremation is denied, as in the death
of exiles from the island. Lepers are buried in hidden places
and their redemption, is carried out by pious persons, secretly
and through an effigy