• LOGIN
  • WEBMAIL
  • CONTACT US
Saturday, May 10, 2025
21st CENTURY CHRONICLE
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME
No Result
View All Result
21st Century Chronicle
No Result
View All Result
Your ads here Your ads here Your ads here
ADVERTISEMENT

What are the spiritual and social significance of bathing the dead?

by Idang Alibi
July 13, 2024
in Column, Lead of the Day, My honest feeling
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on TelegramShare on WhatsApp

What are the spiritual, physical and even social significance of bathing a dead body before he or she is mummified or buried? Where did the custom originate from? Did it come from Ancient Egypt where most Judeo-Christian values that are in much practice in the world today took their roots? Or could it be just one among the many difficult- to- understand and sometimes laughable things that are done pertaining to the dead in much of the world today especially in Christian Africa?

Let us begin from the beginning: how come my thought went go to an issue such as this at all? What must have motivated or triggered a weird idea like this? Well, I am, by training and practice, a lay thinker, or to put it more grandly, a philosopher, a semi one, to be more humble. It is my duty or office to think or wonder about certain things for or on behalf of man or society. In that office, it is my lot to sometime pooh-pooh some ideas; to laugh to scorn some of what I consider foolishness or human stupidity. A man like me called Heraclitus of Ephesus in Ancient Greece was once so appalled by what he considered the stupidity of mankind that he decided to leave the human society of his day and dwell alone in the mountains!

READ ALSO

Tinubu welcomes Qatar’s investment initiatives

Aliero, two PDP Kebbi senators set to decamp to APC after meeting Tinubu – Ganduje

Come to think about this issue of bathing a dead body, who was the man or woman who first thought of it? Why did he or she consider it necessary or imperative? Was he or she near a dead person who smelt horribly? Who will possibly smell the bodily scent of a dead person? If the thought of that person was grander, was the idea meant to prepare him or her for life in the hereafter?

This piece was motivated by the visit of my 86- year old mother. Whenever I have an encounter, no matter how brief it is with her, the subject of her possible death and the manner or protocol of her burial inevitably creeps in. what seems to occupy her thoughts most of the time is about her departure from this ethereal life. About the clothes they need to wear her. The other day, my eldest child and daughter gave her a gift of a wrapper. She told me that that expensive and dearly beloved wrapper is one of those that should go with her! Knowing where she is coming from and how much premium my people place on the hereafter and the things that should go on the journey with the departed, I was too afraid to mention even jokingly to her that ‘’Mama, why do you not say it should be given to a person you dearly love instead? Who told you they wear wrapper there where you are going to?’’ I know how sad and disappointed she will be if I tell her this. She will think I will not faithfully execute her desires and command when she eventually leaves.

She even talks about the exact spot she should be buried in. There was a time in the past that she told me she will like to be buried in a spot next to where her mother, my maternal grandmother was buried. Now she has changed her mind. Although she and my late grandmother are from the same village, she has now realized that that her wish is next to impossibility because doing so will cause a civil war. Her husband’s people will go to war to have her body buried in her husband’s place!

My mother tells me about the number of cows and goats I, as the first born son, should ensure is given to her father’s people, to her husband’s people, to her age mates, to her Catholic mother’s group and a variety of other mourners. Why are all these important to her when she will not be here again to see what will be done or not done?

Could it be our upbringing, the values implanted in us to accept certain things unquestionably? If it is not upbringing that a child should respect the wishes of her mother especially when it relates to her death wishes unquestionably, why does she think that I share in those her values and will see to all the implementation of her wishes? I think about all these and laugh to myself. Why do we humans bother ourselves so much about matters which we have little or no power to control? Why, in the first place, do we do certain things that look laughable and extremely ridiculous?

Why bathe a dead body that is no longer alive to mix with people and so wish to smell good for his own self esteem and for the sake of others also? Why do we use some millions and thousands to buy casket to bury the dead? Why not donate the money meant for that to charity? Is an expensive casket meant it for the good of that dead or is it charity for termites who will be the eventual consumer of that item? What role does our vanity play when we think about death and some of the ceremonies surrounding it?

Is washing the dead not a part of this vanity? If not, let some tell me the biological, the spiritual necessity and any other possible reasons why we must bother ourselves about such an act.

Related Posts

Tinubu welcomes Qatar’s investment initiatives

Tinubu welcomes Qatar’s investment initiatives

May 10, 2025
Ondo APC primaries: Ganduje meets aggrieved aspirants

Aliero, two PDP Kebbi senators set to decamp to APC after meeting Tinubu – Ganduje

May 10, 2025

Politics and prayers work

May 10, 2025
2025 Hajj: Shettima flags off inaugural pilgrims airlift in Imo

2025 Hajj: Shettima flags off inaugural pilgrims airlift in Imo

May 9, 2025
FG worried over attacks on humanitarian workers – Ahmed

FG to repatriate 15,000 Nigerians stranded in Niger, Cameroon, Chad

May 9, 2025
NNPC, Dangote strengthen partnership, reaffirm commitment to energy security

NNPC, Dangote strengthen partnership, reaffirm commitment to energy security

May 9, 2025
No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • 50 million people in West, Central Africa at risk of hunger — WFP
  • Tea industry creates 8,000 jobs, 28 products in two years
  • Stock market sheds N313 billion
  • Visa delay: Nigeria withdraws from World Relays in China
  • Tinubu welcomes Qatar’s investment initiatives

Archives

  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021

Categories

  • A Nigerian elder reflects
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Around Nigeria
  • Arts
  • Automobile
  • Aviation
  • Banking
  • Bazooka Joe
  • Blast from the past
  • Books
  • Breaking News
  • Business Scene
  • Capital Market
  • Cartoons
  • Chronicle Roundtable
  • Column
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Defence
  • Development
  • Diplomacy
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Exclusive
  • Extra
  • Fact Check
  • Features
  • Figure of the day
  • Finance
  • For the record
  • Fragments
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Human rights
  • Humanitarian
  • ICT
  • Infographics
  • Insecurity
  • Insurance
  • Insurgency
  • Interesting
  • Interviews
  • Investigations
  • Judiciary
  • Kannywood
  • Labour
  • Lead of the Day
  • Legal
  • Letters
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature
  • Live Updates
  • Manufacturing
  • Maritime
  • Media
  • Metro News
  • Mining
  • My honest feeling
  • National news
  • National News
  • News
  • News International
  • Nollywood
  • Obituaries
  • Oil and Gas
  • On the hot burner
  • On The One Hand
  • On the one hand
  • Opinion
  • Our Stand
  • Pension
  • People, Politics & Policy
  • Philosofaith
  • Photos of the day
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Profile
  • Property
  • Quote of the day
  • Railway
  • Religion
  • Rights
  • Science
  • Security
  • Special Report
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Telecommunication
  • The Plumb Line
  • The way I see it
  • The write might
  • This queer world
  • Tourism
  • Transport
  • Tributes
  • Uncategorized
  • Video
  • View from the gallery
  • Women

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • PRIVACY POLICY
  • CONTACT US
  • ABOUT US

© 2020 21st Century Chronicle

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • BREAKING NEWS
    • LEAD OF THE DAY
    • NATIONAL NEWS
    • AROUND NIGERIA
    • INTERVIEWS
    • INTERNATIONAL
  • INVESTIGATIONS
    • EXCLUSIVE
    • INFOGRAPHICS
    • SPECIAL REPORT
    • FACT CHECK
  • BUSINESS
    • AVIATION
    • BANKING
    • CAPITAL MARKET
    • FINANCE
    • MANUFACTURING
    • MARITIME
    • OIL AND GAS
    • POWER
    • TELECOMMUNICATION
  • POLITICS
  • CHRONICLE ROUNDTABLE
  • OUR STAND
  • COLUMNS
  • OTHERS
    • BLAST FROM THE PAST
    • ON THE HOT BURNER
    • FEATURES
    • SPORTS
    • ENTERTAINMENT
      • KANNYWOOD
      • NOLLYWOOD
    • BAZOOKA JOE
    • THIS QUEER WORLD
    • FIGURE OF THE DAY
    • QUOTE OF THE DAY
    • INSURGENCY
    • CRIME

© 2020 21st Century Chronicle

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.