Why Cremation?. / Thomas G. Long.
by Long, Thomas G; SIRS Publishing, Inc.
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High School - old - to delete | REF SIRS 2003 Fam62 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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REF SIRS 2003 Fam60 Physician Has Cure for Ailing Nursing Homes. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam61 Of Faith and Forever: How Different Religions Handle Death. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam61 Last Rites. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam62 Why Cremation?. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam62 Cremation Becoming a More Common Choice in U.S.. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam63 What Is a Life Worth?. / | REF SIRS 2003 Fam64 The Big Business of Death. / |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2003.
Originally Published: Why Cremation?, Jan. 30-Feb. 6, 2002; pp. 30-33.
"On December 6, 1876, in the tiny village of Washington, Pennsylvania, an Austrian-born immigrant named Baron Joseph Henry Louis Charles De Palm became the first recipient of what is described as the first cremation in modern America....How things have changed between that time and the recent spreading of the ashes of rock idol Jerry Garcia on the waters of the Ganges River. From its inauspicious and controversial beginnings, the practice of cremation in America has grown into, for the most part, a perfectly acceptable, barely controversial, religiously sanctioned method of disposing of human bodies." (CHRISTIAN CENTURY) This article traces the history of cremation from its roots in 1876, Pennsylvania, to present day, where it "is often heralded as an environmentally sensitive act of good stewardship and an enlightened alternative to burial.".
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