I am new and this is a serious question. Re: digging up a dead body.
I have heard that there is no law saying someone has to be embalmed. Isn’t there a time limit in which they have to be buried in this case?
I am new and this is a serious question. Re: digging up a dead body.
I have heard that there is no law saying someone has to be embalmed. Isn’t there a time limit in which they have to be buried in this case?
I don’t understand what the OP is getting at. If the body isn’t emabalmed, then it will just decay naturally…
Oh, I get it. You mean how long between time of death and eventual internment, before the corpse starts to, uh, stink up the place. That would depend on a number of factors such as temperature. As to the law governing this, that would on where you live. New York State Law simply says:
<Standard disclaimers apply.>
When gramma died my grandfather didn’t want her embalmed. Because there was a public viewing, however, she had to be. YMMV depending on state of residence, but dems da rules in MN if the wake is done through a licensed funeral home.
Thank you for your messages. After reading the story about what happens to a sealed casket, I know I don’t want to be cremated, but I sure don’t want to turn to jelly, yuk, I, for some reason remember 24 hours as the time limit. I wonder if that is why princess Dianas boyfriend was buried almost immediately? I think there is a religion that doesn’t embalm people. It’s late, and I am tired. and this is not a real pleasant subject. Jelly yuk!
I can’t speak for all branches of Judiasm, but I can tell you that Orthodox Jews are not embalmed. Burial usually takes place within 24-48 hours.
Diana’s BF was buried within 24 hours because he was Muslim; they, like Orthodox Jews, try to bury their dead within 24 hours.
AFAIK there is no time limit between death and embalming; the body just has to be embalmed before a public viewing. Before that they’re refrigerated.
Then again, we don’t have the tradition of public viewing, so the dead body is in a refrigerated morgue until funeral or (more often) cremation.
S. Norman