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Writing Assignment: At a Funeral (Solution)

John F. Kennedy.  Funeral and temporary grave, November 25, 1963

John F. Kennedy. Funeral and temporary grave.
November 25, 1963

1.    What event do we see in this picture?
In this picture we see a burial.

2.    What kind of attire are the people wearing?
The people are dressed in black (dark) clothes.

3.    Why are they dressed this way?
They are dressed this way, because they are in mourning.

4.    What is the woman carrying?
The woman is carrying an American flag.

5.    Do you recognize who the woman is?  Can you guess which famous event this is?
The woman is Jackie Kennedy.  This is the burial of President Kennedy, November 25, 1963.

6.    What is a polite way of referring to a dead body?
A polite way of referring to a dead body is to say “the deceased.”

7.    Who prepares the body for burial?
A mortician (also called an undertaker) prepares the body for burial.

8.    What is the name of the process of preserving a body for burial?
Embalming is the process of preserving a body for burial.

9.    What do you call the container the body is placed in?
The container that the body is placed in is called a casket, or a coffin.

10.    What do you call the sadness that you feel when someone dies?
The sadness that you feel when someone dies is called grief.

11.    What is the name of the memorial service for the person who died?
The memorial service for a person who has died is called a funeral.

12.    What is another name for “burial”?
Another name for burial is interment.

13.    What is the name of the little building that a body is interred in if it does not go into the ground?
If a body is not buried in the ground, it may be placed in a crypt or mausoleum.

14.    What is an alternative to burial?
Cremation is an alternative to burial.

15.    What is the name of the container the ashes are placed in?
The ashes from cremation are placed in an urn.

16.    What is used to mark the grave?
A headstone, gravestone, or tombstone is used to mark the grave.

17.    How is the casket transported to the cemetery?
The casket is transported to the cemetery by a hearse.

18.     Who carries the casket to and from the hearse?
Pallbearers carry the casket to and from the hearse.

19.    When a member of the military dies, how may he be honored?
When a member of the military dies, he may be buried with full military honors.

20.    What is a wake for a public figure called?
A wake for a public figure is called “lying in state.”

Paragraph:  At a Funeral

What sort of mourning or funeral customs does your culture observe?  How are people buried?  What does a typical grave look like?  Write a brief paragraph about your culture’s funeral or mourning customs.

Kennedy funeral procession leaves White House, November 25, 1963

Kennedy funeral procession leaves White House.
November 25, 1963

It is customary to wear black to a funeral.  Black is the color of mourning, and in the old days, a widow would dress in black for a period of time following her husband’s death.  It was also part of tradition for her to wear a veil over her face.  If black clothes are not worn to the funeral, then the clothes should at least be dark colored, conveying somberness.  A military man may wear his dress uniform for the funeral, especially if the deceased was also a member of the armed forces.  If it is a funeral for a policeman or fireman who died in the line of duty, then his fellow policemen/firemen would also wear their dress uniforms to the funeral.

In the picture of Kennedy’s burial, you can see that Jackie Kennedy is dressed in black, and a veil is covering her face.  You can also see several members of the military – Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, and Special Forces – attending to the graveside service as a military honor guard.  In addition to being Commander-in-Chief (as all Presidents are), President Kennedy had served in the Navy in World War II, so the American flag draped his coffin, and he was buried with military honors at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.  If you go there today, you will see that his grave is marked with an always-burning fire, called an “eternal flame.”

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Writing Assignment: At a Funeral

JFK_Funeral_and_temporary_grave_November_25_1963-scaled

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Vocabulary

Funeral Funeral home / funeral parlor Funeral home director / undertaker / mortician Coffin / casket Headstone / gravestone / tombstone
Vault Tomb Grave Mausoleum / crypt Plot
Embalm Cremate Cremation Cremains Crematory
Memorial In memoriam Guestbook Wake / viewing / visitation Military funeral honors
Eulogy Grief Mourning Mourner Obituary / obit
Hearse Interment Cortege Urn Spray
Sympathy Deceased Repose Lie in state Service
Pallbearer Cemetery

 

1.    What event do we see in this picture?
2.    What kind of attire are the people wearing?
3.    Why are they dressed this way?
4.    What is the woman carrying?
5.    Do you recognize who the woman is?  Can you guess which famous event this is?
6.    What is a polite way of referring to a dead body?
7.    Who prepares the body for burial?
8.    What is the name of the process of preserving a body for burial?
9.    What do you call the container the body is placed in?
10.    What do you call the sadness that you feel when someone dies?
11.    What is the name of the memorial service for the person who died?
12.    What is another name for “burial”?
13.    What is the name of the little building that a body is interred in if it does not go into the ground?
14.    What is an alternative to burial?
15.    What is the name of the container the ashes are placed in?
16.    What is used to mark the grave?
17.    How is the casket transported to the cemetery?
18.     Who carries the casket to and from the hearse?
19.    When a member of the military dies, how may he be honored?
20.    What is a wake for a public figure called?

Paragraph:  At a Funeral

What sort of mourning or funeral customs does your culture observe?  How are people buried?  What does a typical grave look like?  Write a brief paragraph about your culture’s funeral or mourning customs.

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Culture Focus: Funerals – When Someone Dies

funeralWhat happens when someone dies? Of course, it depends on how and where the person dies. I will describe to you what happens when someone dies at home from natural causes – for example, from old age or illness.

When someone dies, there are two phone calls that need to be made: one to medical personnel, such as a hospice nurse or attending physician, and one to a funeral home director (also known as an undertaker). The medical personnel is needed to confirm the person is indeed dead. Ultimately, the attending physician will sign the death certificate. Once the death has been confirmed by medical personnel, the undertaker can remove the body to the funeral home to prepare it for burial. Usually this includes embalming, but often the body is also cleaned up if necessary, and the hair may be done or makeup applied to help make the body look natural. The undertaker will also dress the body in a set of clothes selected by the family for burial.

Besides the clothes, there are other details that the family must arrange with the funeral home director. A casket (also called a coffin) must be selected, as well as a vault where the casket will be in the ground. Pallbearers, whose job it is to carry the coffin, must be asked to serve. Dates and times for the wake and funeral will be set, and the cemetery must be notified so the grave can be opened. The funeral service must be planned, including whether it will be in a church or a funeral parlor, whether a minister will officiate, whether someone will give a eulogy, whether there will be any special music, and so on. An obituary is usually written and submitted to the local newspaper. Flowers may be ordered for decorating the casket. There are so many things to think about. It may be overwhelming for a grieving family, so sometimes people “pre-arrange” their own funeral – they pick out the coffin, make other arrangements, and sometimes even pay for the funeral in advance. Making such plans ahead of time certainly helps the family out.

If a person is going to be cremated (rather than buried), the family will not have to make decisions such as what casket to select, or what clothes the deceased will be buried in. The body will still have to be prepared before cremation – for example, if the deceased had a pacemaker or other implanted medical devices, these would be removed before cremation. In the case of cremation, the body is sent to a crematory (place for cremating a dead body), and after that process has been completed, the crematory will send the ashes (called cremains) back to the funeral home. Some people choose to get an urn (a type of vase) for the cremains, and keep the cremains in their home. Others choose to bury the cremains in the grave at the cemetery.

Many times the family will choose to have a wake (also known as a viewing or a visitation) the day or night before the funeral. The purpose of a wake is to let friends and acquaintances, etc. pay their respects and extend their sympathies to the family. Sometimes a family may opt to have the funeral and/or burial be private (family only), and a wake would be the only opportunity for others to pay their respects. Others may have to work, and would therefore not be able to attend the funeral, which is during the day. At the wake, visitors may sign a guest book, and may choose to make a donation in memory of the deceased. Some might even send flowers as a gesture of sympathy.

On the day of the funeral, people gather at the church or funeral home for the service. A minister or other speaker usually shares a short message on the brevity of life, the blessedness of heaven or the afterlife, or something similar. A speaker, who may or may not be the same as the one who officiates, often gives a eulogy – a memorial speech honoring the life of the deceased. After the funeral service, the pallbearers carry the casket out to the waiting hearse (special car that can hold a casket). Those who are going to the interment (burial) get into their cars and line up behind the hearse. The cars in the cortege (funeral procession) will have their headlights on and be flagged with a “funeral” emblem to indicate that they are part of the procession. The hearse will lead the cortege on the drive to the cemetery. Traffic must yield to the funeral cortege: if the hearse goes through an intersection with a traffic signal and the light changes, the procession is allowed to proceed uninterrupted, even though the light is red. Furthermore, other cars are not permitted to interrupt the cortege. A funeral cortege also has the right-of-way at stop signs.

At the cemetery, the pallbearers remove the casket from the hearse and place it on a lowering device over the open grave. The speaker will give a few brief words, and then the casket is lowered into the waiting vault. The funeral and interment are over.

After the interment, it is customary to provide a luncheon or some sort of meal before everyone departs. If the funeral was held in a church, this luncheon might be prepared by the ladies of the church on behalf of the family. Otherwise, the family might invite those present at the interment to a nearby restaurant. Oftentimes the talk at the luncheon is of reminiscing about the deceased, or of family days gone by. At the conclusion of the luncheon, everyone makes his goodbyes and goes on his way, and the family begins a new chapter in their lives, a chapter without their loved one.

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