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Passing
Over : Legend & Lore
One of the eternally unanswered questions of the living is,
"what happens when we die?"
An infinite array of beliefs on this ponderance has been written
over many millenia. Cultural belief and tradition concerning
death and the passage into the afterlife can vary considerably.
Myths orginating from far and near give us a tapestry of multi-faceted
views on passing over, the afterlife and reincarnation. Many
cultures in the world today still adhere to some piece of
their particular myths concerning death and that which is
associated with it. To follow I have included various examples
of the cultural and traditional beliefs that have been passed
down from many areas of the world.
Anubis, is the jackal-headed, Egyptian god of death. He also
presides over the ritual of embalming. Myth states that he
performed this service on the great god Osiris. His Egyptian
names were Inpu and Wepwawet, which means "opener of
the ways". It is believed that he led the souls of the
dead into the west to the Hall of Judgement.
Hades, the Greek ruler of the Underworld, was the brother
of the Olympian god Zeus. Passage in Greek myth was processional.
The Greek, Hermes Psychopompos led the dead down into Hades.
The ferryman, Charon, took the dead across the infernal rivers.
The infernal rivers are the River Styx (river of hate), Achoron
(river of woe), Lethe (river of forgetfulness), Cocytos (river
of wailing) and the Phlegthon(river of fire). Traveling these
rivers represented leaving each of the ill-feelings behind
you, a purifying before entering the afterlife.
A great many myths surrounding the dead come from Celtic cultures.
One transformation theme, stemming from Celtic belief, is
that of turning into a bird upon one's death. The raven is
a strong example here.
Warriors of Northern Europe who died in battle, might go to
the god Odin's Great Hall of Valhalla. The goddess Freyja
received slain warriors as well as the souls of women. Those
dying of age, illness or accident went to Hel, overseen by
the God Loki's daughter, also named Hel (not to be confused
with the Christian "Hell"). Those who were chosen
to die in battle were done so on Odin's behalf by theValkyries.
The name Valkyrie means "chooser of the slain".
The female spirits went to the battlefields and claimed the
slain, bringing them back to Valhalla.
In Ireland, Badb, "the boiling one", presides over
the great cauldron. The great cauldron is, in myth and modern
pagan belief, a place to which all life goes upon death and
from which it waits to be reborn.
Scottish lore provides that "willing" a dying loved
one to live, traps their spirit and prevents them from passing
over, thereby prolonging their suffering. The author and poet
Thomas Campbell wrote "to live in the hearts we leave
behind is not to die".
Loved ones earthly forms may leave us but within our hearts
and memories their spirits live on. The common denominator
in most myths associated with death is that their is always
a "higher being" to welcome and guide you into the
afterlife - but that is just a pagan's pespective.
- Heather
Drolet
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