Saturday, 26 October 2013

A Muslim Daughter's Role in Preparing her Mother for Burial

The Guardian today ran a touching piece about a young muslim woman who, on the death of her mother, discovered it was her duty to wash down her mother's body and prepare her for burial. 

http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/oct/26/muslim-daughter-mother-burial

It's strange: this is not something we really talk about in modern Western culture, but every person who dies is washed down. It is interesting to consider why this wouldn't be done by a close family member.

Perhaps because we do not know that we are 'allowed' to do it - we don't learn it at school, and death is still such a taboo subject in so many homes. Perhaps because we are overwraught with grief that we do not feel that we could manage it. Perhaps because this level of intimacy would feel strange to us.

Whatever the reason, this could undoubtedly be a cathartic process; something which could help with the grief process and give us an additional way to say goodbye to our loved ones. If it were more commonly known that families could take part in this practice, would more people choose to do so?

As Momtaz Begum-Hossain puts it: "I reminisce over it all as a special memory. Not everyone has a chance to say goodbye properly to someone they love, but I did more than that."

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

“Preparing for death is one of the most empowering things you can do. Thinking about death clarifies your life.”

- Candy Chang

Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Roman Skulls Discovered by Crossrail Tunnellers


Around 20 Roman skulls have been discovered by Crossrail tunnellers building a utility tunnel at Crossrail’s Liverpool Street Station site.

Working under the direction of Crossrail’s archaeologists, the construction workers carefully removed the human skulls, found up to six metres below ground in the sediment of the historic river channel of the River Walbrook.

The skulls have been found below the Bedlam burial ground established in the 16th century, where 3,000 skeletons will be carefully removed during major archaeological excavations next year.

The tunnellers have also discovered wooden medieval structures believed to have been part of the walls of the Bedlam burial ground.