Fire Time, XIII.
"'Remember, different nations have different ways of taking a member over a loss. What the clans do is to provide him or her company, day and night, until the wound seems to've healed. Somebody's always beside the mourner, ready to lend a hand or talk or whatever. Usually several persons are. For most this is good. At least it's better than brooding alone...'" (p. 149)
I saw this custom in Northern Ireland. In the 1970s, when Sheila and I lived in a house without a telephone, we were visited by her aunt but her brother telegrammed that both of them were needed back home immediately because Sheila's and his brother-in-law had just died. When I walked to a public telephone kiosk to respond to the telegram, I had to tell him that the widow could take cups from the aunt's house if she needed them. I relayed this message but wondered: why does she need cups?
When we arrived, the front room of the house was full of people, most of whom just sat there without speaking. A few sat directly around the widow. The kitchen table was piled high with things to eat, mainly cakes and biscuits, and some of us spent a lot of time serving tea or washing dishes. The coffin was upstairs. After a day or so, a Presbyterian minister arrived and spoke in the house. Then the hearse went straight to the cemetery.
Larreka's clans would understand. They help their neighbours without stint and honour the gods.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteThis also reminds me of the Jewish custom of sitting Shiva when one of them dies.
Ad astra! Sean