monastery in Tibet Accounts from observers vary. The following description is assembled from multiple accounts by observers from the U.S. and Europe.
Participants Prior to the procedure,
monks may chant
mantra around the body and burn
juniper incense – although ceremonial activities often take place on the preceding day. The work of disassembling of the body may be done by a monk, or, more commonly, by
rogyapas ("body-breakers"). All the eyewitness accounts remarked on the fact that the
rogyapas did not perform their task with gravity or ceremony, but rather talked and laughed as during any other type of physical labor. According to Buddhist teaching, this makes it easier for the soul of the deceased to move on from the uncertain plane between life and death onto the next life. Some accounts refer to individuals who carry out sky burial rituals as a
tokden which is Tibetan for 'master' of the process. While a Tokden has an important role in burial rites, they are often people of low social status and sometimes receive payment from the families of the deceased.
Disassembling the body According to most accounts, vultures are given the whole body. Then, when only the bones remain, these are broken up with mallets, ground with
tsampa (barley flour with tea and
yak butter, or milk) and given to the crows and hawks that have waited for the vultures to depart. In one account, the leading
rogyapa cut off the limbs and hacked the body to pieces, handing each part to his assistants, who used rocks to pound the flesh and bones together to a pulp, which they mixed with tsampa before the vultures were summoned to eat. In some cases, a Tokden will use butcher's tools to divide the body. Sometimes the internal organs were removed and processed separately (and sold), but they too were consumed by birds. The hair is removed from the head and may be simply thrown away; at Drigung, it seems, at least some hair is kept in a room of the monastery. None of the eyewitness accounts specify which kind of knife is used in the
jhator. One source states that it is a "ritual flaying knife" or
trigu (Sanskrit
kartika), but another source expresses skepticism, noting that the
trigu is considered a woman's tool (whereas
rogyapas seem to be exclusively male).
Vultures as vultures feed. The species contributing to the ritual are typically the
Himalayan and
griffon vultures. In places where there are several
jhator offerings each day, the birds sometimes have to be coaxed to eat, which may be accomplished with a ritual dance. According to Buddhist belief, it is a bad omen if only a small number of vultures come down to eat, if portions of the body are left over after the vultures fly away, or if the body is completely left untouched. In places where fewer bodies are offered, the vultures are more eager, and sometimes have to be fended off with sticks during the initial preparations. Often there is a limit to how many corpses can be consumed at a certain burial site, prompting lamas to find different areas. It is believed that if too many corpses are disposed of in a certain burial site, ghosts may appear. Not only are vultures an important aspect to celestial burial but also to its habitat's ecology. They contribute to carcass removal and nutrient recycling, as they are scavengers of the land. Due to an alarming drop in their population, in 1988, the Law of the People's Republic of China on the Protection of Wildlife added certain species of vultures into the "rare" or "threatened" categories of their national list of protected wild animals. Local Chinese governments surrounding sky burial locations have established regulations to avoid disturbance of the vultures during these rituals, as well as to not allow individuals who have died due to infectious diseases or toxicosis from receiving a sky burial to prevent compromising the health of the vultures. == See also ==