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After Life
In
China, and some other areas in Asia, the social ethics and moral
teachings of Confucius are blended with the Taoist communion with
nature and Buddhist concepts of the afterlife, to form a set of
complementary, peacefully co-existent and ecumenical religions.
At
death, the relatives cry out aloud to inform the neighbors. The
family starts mourning and puts on clothes made of a course
material. The corpse is washed and placed in a coffin. Mourners
bring incense and money to offset the cost of the funeral. Food and
significant objects of the deceased are placed into the coffin. A
Buddhist or Taoist priest (or even a Christian minister) performs
the burial ritual. Friends and family follow the coffin to the
cemetery, along with a willow branch which symbolizes the soul of
the person who has died. The latter is carried back to the family
altar where it is used to "install" the spirit of the deceased.
Liturgies are performed on the 7th, 9th, 49th day after the burial
and on the first and third anniversaries of the death.

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