Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Atheists & Agnostics

Showing Original Post only (View all)

progressoid

(50,918 posts)
Tue Aug 25, 2015, 02:14 PM Aug 2015

Here are some great responses to a mean-spirited piece about non-religious funerals [View all]

Here are some great responses to a mean-spirited piece about non-religious funerals by Rev Giles Fraser. As these letters attest, humanist funerals are often all the more sincere and touching for their emphasis on a person's life and the memories they left behind.

• I am simply astonished at Giles Fraser’s dismissal of secular funerals. Apparently “there is a basic democracy in this aspect of religion that is often absent from the secular funeral”. I don’t know what he means. I understand all those words individually, of course, but not when they are brought together in this church-speak.

I’ve probably heard more religious funerals, over the past 20 years, than most people. If I am conducting a secular-humanist funeral, I am at the crematorium about half an hour before my scheduled time. So I hear what is going on in the preceding ceremony. It’s often token religion. Because there are still people who expect to see a vicar.

There is a desperation about some of the vicars. Most have given up on hymns. Where they have not given up, it is really quite strange to hear a hymn sung out by about three voices. Or a muttered prayer.

Fraser also seems to think also that we secular-humanists see only the good in people. Not true! I’ve had lengthy conversations with families who have made it plain that if I say what a nice person this was, people will laugh. They get the truth from me – not necessarily all of it, but certainly no glazing over. Does a vicar do anything else? I often get people asking me how I know the person, because I seem to know a lot about him or her. That’s because I spend a great deal of time with families to ensure that the ceremony is right. I try to make clear that I am an outsider.

Perhaps the most frequent human failing we encounter is drink leading to early death. Does Fraser really think anybody is going to stand up and say what a nice bloke this was, when he has laid waste to his own and his family life?
Mike Granville
Sheffield

• One of my parents had a secular funeral, the other a C of E service. In the first, my siblings and I had a good deal of freedom to express some of our feelings, and to mark our father’s passing as we wanted. In the other, I expected at least to find some solace in the beauty of the 17th-century English. However, I spent most of the time sitting in my pew feeling overwhelmed by mumbo jumbo.
Andrew Fleming
Clifford, Herefordshire

• How dare Giles Fraser make such facile and offensive assumptions about other people’s grief and mourning. I have been to many funerals, some which helped ease the process of losing a loved one and some which only made it harder. The funeral we arranged in tears and desperation for my beloved was resolutely secular, in line with his and my deeply help beliefs. It was tragic and painful and it brought his and my friends together to make a proper memorial for a life of tragedy and success, for ourselves, in the way we wanted, and to build support for us in the recovery from loss.

The humanist model which acknowledges the humanity of everyone, and understands that death celebrations are done for the survivors makes perfect sense to those of us who know this truth about the finality of death. It is preposterous to suggest that this is more narcissistic than a celebrity-fuelled love-in costing thousands and attended by the ludicrously selfishly wealthy who conveniently forget the injunction to sell all and give the proceeds to the poor.

I was really hurt by this dismissal by a complete stranger of the sincerity of my grief and the way I chose to express my love.

But I was more angered, as my love would have been, by his suggestion that there are some people rendered completely unworthy of love because of the particular crimes we abominate today – this is akin to the long gone religious practice of denying a burial service to those who commit suicide – it names some people as completely outside the bounds of human relations, and assumes that they will leave no mourners, that their deaths create no grief. This is a result of a religious mind set which still, despite the mantras of forgiveness, divides people into the martyrs and the damned, and refuses to see people as the product of their human relations, complete and comprehensible.
Sarah Lambert
London

• I respect anyone’s right to an opinion (even if vastly different to mine) what I cannot stomach is the arrogance of religious zealots whose “holier-than-thou” attitude often manifests itself at funerals as: “It doesn’t matter if X believed in Jesus ... Jesus believes in X.”. Giles Fraser’s comments about secular funerals fall into this category.
Steven Liversedge
Clacton-on-Sea, Essex

• I found the article by Giles Fraser as deeply depressing as many of the Christian funerals he was seeking to applaud. In days gone by, when Christian and atheist alike were given so called Christian funerals, I came out of some services upset by the vicars’ perfunctory words about someone they did not know and did not care about. My own father, an atheist and a good man, had a Christian funeral where the vicar stated that non-believers would go to hell.

The Loose Canon asserts that all Christian funerals have a basic democracy as all are valued equally and asserts ‘there is no such thing as a Christian celebrity funeral’ What absolute nonsense. Contrast a celebrity or state funeral with that for an elderly ordinary person. The former often seems to be an ego trip for bishops with little regard for truth.

At secular funerals those who choose to speak do so because they cared deeply about the deceased and if there is not much to say the service is tailored accordingly.

Incidentally had Giles Fraser said the same thing about Muslims or Jews there would be uproar. However, ill informed attacks on secularism are the order of the day. Will the editor provide some balance by having a weekly quarter page loose secularist column? I know many able writers who would contribute!
Dorothy Smith
Welwyn Garden City

• Having organised a secular funeral for my recently departed mother I was appalled by Giles Fraser’s Loose Cannon piece critical of such events. His opinion is self-serving and based on prejudice as opposed to evidence. Of the 10 family members and friends who agreed to speak at my mother’s funeral, we heard people who had known my mother from a variety of perspectives, offering a picture of this woman that some of her grandchildren only saw as a one dimensional fragile old woman with dementia. Comments made by my cousins, ex-partner and old school friends gave a view of a generous, determined and hardworking woman, who had served with in the forces with distinction during the second world war.
Lee Porter
Bridport, Dorset


http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/aug/24/secular-funerals-are-not-a-blind-date-with-the-truth

via the British Humanist Society https://www.facebook.com/humanism?fref=nf
16 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Latest Discussions»Alliance Forums»Atheists & Agnostics»Here are some great respo...»Reply #0