Yes, it was waiting under the Rainbow Arch.
I thought of asking that as some of the person now occupies the animals.
The same behavior is traditional in Spain. Body parts would be buried directly in the ossarium (where decayed bodies get moved to make room, either for more relatives in the same grave, or from a niche whose lease has expired - no pun intended). I’m not sure what do current health regulations have to say about this practice, but normally it would involve sizable, visible amputations.
Just glad he didn’t have fallen arches.
I don’t understand your question. What do you mean "was the foot already there?
Already where?
Zev Steinhardt
You know, there, in heaven … waiting for the sole.
I was about to rebuke this part of the discussion as terribly disrespectful towards Zev’s grandfather…but god, it was worth it for that one.
Maybe, but some believe it. I grew up in a fundamentalist protestant religion, and similar questions about cremation because of this belief were raised more often than you might think.
Oh, I am sure it is very common. It is still a pathetic supreme being who can be thwarted by cremation or dismemberment.