BURIAL
This page, and the one on cremation, may be especially difficult for you, yet
deciding between burial and cremation is one of the first choices you must
make. It's your decision!
Disposition is the term used by the funeral industry to describe the
final handling of the deceased's remains.
Although your initial decision for the disposition of the body is between
burial and cremation, there are several variations on each.
Whichever choice you make, the body will eventually return to its natural
elements.
Burial Choices
If the body is buried...
- It can be interred (earth
burial).
- It can be entombed in a crypt
within a mausoleum (above-ground burial).
- It can be buried at sea.
Why people choose burial
Although the trend is moving toward cremation, the majority of North
Americans still choose to bury their dead and to be
buried themselves. Here are some reasons you might choose burial.
1. Burial is traditional within your family, religious group, or geographical
area
- For instance, in the United States
today, about 79 percent choose burial. In Canada, the rate is about 64
percent.
2. You do not like the idea of the body being "burned"
- You prefer to have the body
slowly return to the elements.
3. You want to erect a monument on the grave
- Perhaps you want to visit the
grave in the days to come, and you find a graveyard more appealing than
say, a columbarium.
Decisions You Must Make If You Choose Burial
- Whether or not the body is to
be embalmed
- Which kind of casket (or
coffin) will house the body
- Whether to buy a casket, rent
one, or build your own
- Whether or not the cemetery
requires a vault or grave liner
- Which cemetery to use
- What kind of plot
- What to put on the gravestone
