mazzer
10-08-2002, 03:21 PM
Not too far from my house there is a large cemetary, which, in my limited experience with matters of the deceased, has an unfamiliar attribute: there are no tombstones. Not a single one, in the entire cemetary. Instead, each grave has only a metal vase for flowers. (I must assume that are stones flush with the ground that I can't see from the road, otherwise how would one know which grave is which.)
My questions are:
(1) Is there a religious faith, which this cemetary may be aligned with, that does not allow or discourages above-ground tombstones? Or is it simply the policy of this cemetary to not allow them, presumably for aesthetic reasons?
(2) What are those buildings called, where instead of being buried in the ground, bodies are, for lack of a better description, sort of interred into a wall that ends up looking like a large filing cabinet, with a grid of rectangles facing the outside that bear inscriptions and flower holders? Are these mausoleums, or are those just when the building houses only one person?
My questions are:
(1) Is there a religious faith, which this cemetary may be aligned with, that does not allow or discourages above-ground tombstones? Or is it simply the policy of this cemetary to not allow them, presumably for aesthetic reasons?
(2) What are those buildings called, where instead of being buried in the ground, bodies are, for lack of a better description, sort of interred into a wall that ends up looking like a large filing cabinet, with a grid of rectangles facing the outside that bear inscriptions and flower holders? Are these mausoleums, or are those just when the building houses only one person?