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Excerpt:
...The Toraja way of death is a fascinating mix of ritual,
custom and spectacle. For the Toraja, the dead are as
much a part of society as the living. At Lemo, cliffs
rise precipitously from the rice fields like stonework
condominiums. Crypts, carved with prodigious manual
labour, high into the solid rock, house the mortal remains
of Toraja nobility. Set among the crypts, the striking
tau tau, life-size wooden effigies representing
the deceased, look impassively on the world below. Tau
means ‘man’ and tau tau ‘men’ or ‘statue’.
Of the 300,000 Toraja, a tribal people who live in
Torajaland, a mountainous area on the island of Sulawesi
in Indonesia, about 100,000 continue to follow the ‘way
of the
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Ancestors’. The precise name for their homeland is Tana
Toraja. The Toraja believe that they can take possessions
with them to the afterlife, and the dead generally go
well equipped to their grave. Since this led to grave
plundering, the Toraja started to hide their dead in
caves or niches hewn out of rock faces. These caves
were hollowed out by specialist cave builders who were
traditionally paid in buffalo, and since the building
of a cave would cost several buffalo, only the rich
could afford it. Although the exterior of a cave looks
small, the interior is large enough to entomb an entire
family. Coffins go deep inside the caves, while the
tau tau look down from their balconies in the
rock face.
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