Beliefs of Aboriginal death and death in Australia Aboriginal people are often classified as primitive races, but their religious beliefs are based on pan-Americanism and totems like the American Indians. where. In this article I will explain the beliefs leading to the death and death of indigenous peoples that have something in common with many common religions of the day. Beliefs about indigenous people's death and death are primitive. Because all these beliefs are combined in various ways.
Thousands of years ago, indigenous people in Australia lived in their dreams, but today most people of the indigenous community say they are loyal to Christianity. These beliefs provide indigenous peoples with guidance and prospects on all aspects of their lives. In many tribal areas of indigenous peoples, there are various variations in these beliefs and customs, but indigenous peoples all have a close relationship between themselves and the environment.
Although indigenous peoples are usually classified as primitive races, their religious beliefs are based on pan-Americanism and totems like American Indians, but indigenous funeral practices and death beliefs are often found in other cultures and many I have something in common. In this article I will explain the beliefs leading to the death and death of indigenous peoples that have something in common with many common religions of the day. Beliefs about indigenous people's death and death are primitive. Because all these beliefs are combined in various ways. The purpose of looking at common grounds is to examine the common grounds of all religions by investigating the aspects of death and death which are very local and old beliefs.
In many aspects of indigenous people's life, the interactions between visible and invisible, the reality of the outside world and the dream era are concentrated. There is no difference in the perception of death by indigenous people. Indigenous people believe that death is a continuing process of complementarity of life in the sense that it means death through the process of enlightenment, both in the biological sense and in the process of enlightenment. After the body dies, the most important stage of the death process begins. The spirit leaves the earth's atmosphere in the course of months or even years (Lawlor, 1991). In the Mahayana Buddhist tradition, the spirit takes only 12 hours to leave the body, but the spirit will delay leaving the body after death (Parry, 1995).