Tomb raiders give the dead no rest in
Dinh Truyn of
Ethnic people in
the Central Highlands bury their dead with jewels and antiques since they
believe the person would need them in the afterlife, only for the graves to
be destroyed by thieves.
An old cemetery in
Mo H’ra village in
The village head,
H’Mung, said the tomb of a rich or powerful person would have gold and
silver, old pottery, and a coffin made of sua, a rare and valuable wood.
Some thieves even
dump the corpse and steal the coffin, he said.
“One such tomb
could turn a thief into a billionaire overnight.”
He said this has
caused thousands of Bana, Jara,
It began since
late last year.
In many cases,
people no longer know which corpse belongs to which grave.
A number of
corpses have been left lying on the ground because reburying them is a costly
affair. In many ethnic communities, a family has to offer many buffaloes,
pigs, chicken and a lot of wine as a sign of apology to a corpse before
burying it again.
Though not all
families are rich, all have to bury their relatives with something since
custom requires the living to share some of the family’s fortune with the
dead.
Dinh Van Ngheo, a
Gia Lai resident, said he buried a relative two years ago with some old bowls
and bottles and found the tomb dug up a week later.
He said the items
could have been sold to antique collectors.
Locals broke the
bottom of old bowls and bottles they buried to discourage the thieves, but it
did not work. They still took
them and fixed them with some glue before selling, H’Mung said.
ThanhnienNews
|
Thứ Tư, 5 tháng 12, 2012
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