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Virtual TombHiruki Family Tomb, Fukue, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan In Japan, in accordance with Buddhist tradition, the bones of a deceased family member are placed in an individual urn and kept with those of their ancestors in a family tomb (ohaka). Living family members visit the tomb on Ohigan (Spring and Fall Equinox) and during Obon (Festival of the Dead) in the summertime. Most Japanese people live in big cities these days, and must travel long distances to their ohaka, which tend to be in smaller cities and towns in the countryside. In families whose members live far away, not everyone can make it back to their ohaka for Obon every summer to pay their respects. I read a recent newspaper article about the Kannonin Buddhist temple in Hiroshima, Japan, which offers virtual tombs for a family's deceased relatives. For a family like mine, living across the Pacific Ocean, a virtual ohaka, accessible anytime from anywhere in the world, makes eminent sense! Just call up this image, light some incense and hang some lanterns around the computer monitor...
Links:Graveyard Comes to Life on WebCNET News.com's coverage of the story that inspired this page.
Personal Experiences With Buddhism: "My Childhood Experience with Ohaka-mairi"
Choice of Exits: People Opt for Nontraditional Funerals, Graves
"Rest in virtual peace"
High cost of dying a grave issue for Japanese
Breaking with family tradition at the cemetery
Designer graves take pain out of tending the dead
Planning for your own death
Japan - Hi-tech Cemeteries
Virtual Tamagotchi Cemetery
Ties Talk Archive: Ohaka
Halving the Bones
Kofun: Ancient Japanese Tomb
Sapporo Family Keeps Dead Dad
Man Leaves Father's Body On Ice for 13 Years
Funeral houses winning as more patrons cash in their chips
Dead bodies could enrich soil faster: scientist Dr. Bob Prescribes Do-It-Yourself Mummification
Find-A-Grave
Celebrate Life! Inc.
Final trip - sending ashes of loved ones to space
My Green Heaven
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Page first posted in February 1997. Last updated 11 July 2002.