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==== Tana Toraja ==== A [[TED Talk]] by Kelli Swazey<ref name=":7">{{Citation|last=Swazey|first=Kelli|title=Life that doesn't end with death|date=October 2013 |url=https://www.ted.com/talks/kelli_swazey_life_that_doesn_t_end_with_death|language=en|access-date=28 April 2017}}</ref> discusses how [[Tana Toraja Regency|Tana Toraja]], a Sulawesi province in Eastern Indonesia, experiences death as a process, rather than an event. The culture of Tana Toraja views funerals as the most important event in a person's life. Because of this importance placed on death, Tana Toraja landscape is covered in the rituals and events transpired after death. The hierarchy of an individual's life is based on the sacrifices of animals made after their death. Funerals tend to be celebrated by Tana Toraja people, typically lasting days to even weeks long. Death is seen as a transformation, rather than a private loss.<ref name=":7" /> A Torajan is not considered 'dead' until their family members are able to collect the resources necessary to hold a funeral that expresses the status of the deceased. Until these funerals are upheld the deceased are held in [[Tongkonan]], built to house corpses that are not considered 'dead'.<ref name=":7" /> The deceased can be held in Tongkonan for years, waiting for their families to collect the necessary resources to hold a funeral. The Tongkonan represents both the identity of the family and the process of birth and death. The process of birth and death is shown by having the houses that individuals are born in be the same structure as the Tongkonan, houses that individuals die in. Up until the funeral the deceased being housed in the Tongkonan are symbolically treated as members of the family, still being cared for by family members.<ref name=":7" />
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