Tibetan Buddhists buried celestial burials in the mountains of Tibet, which marks the beginning of a new life for "buried" dead. Unlike many other rituals around the world, burials of heavenly bodies are rituals that can only be achieved by Tibetan Buddhists. Throughout history, Tibetan bodily burial is seen as a unique habit in terms of its meaning, process, and reasons behind rituals. The process of filling the Tibetan sky begins with the death of a person.
Mongolian culture is famous for Tibetan people. Because "heavenly burial" is exposed to these elements, leaving corpses in a very unprotected place swallowed by wild animals. This is part of Vajrayana's view of Buddism and respects the unnecessity of the body after death. But this does not apply to anyone. A recent record of the funeral in Mongolia on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar shows that a funeral underground is also taking place. There are milk, rice, beautiful sand around the grave.
Empty burial, or jahtor, is a Tibetan rite that brings new meaning to recycling. When a person dies, rogyapas (or body breakers) bring their bodies to sacred places in the mountains, they are exposed to elements, broken, or eerie vultures. Some traditions remove the meat and crush them into small pieces for food. If it goes back over 11000 years ago, such Tibetans and Mongolian regions are too many for burials and cremations, so it is possible that astronomical burial was originally developed for practical use. The ceremony is being held today as well
The heavenly burial was the funeral of the Tibetan who was left in the vultures to cut off the remains and eat at the top of the mountain. This is the most common way to deal with the deceased; cremation is confined to elderly monks and water burials that are often reserved for children through local rivers. In the burial of the celestial bodies, the dead body was cut out finely by the designated priest and was eaten by vultures, due to the death of the dead. "But first, we were leaving our body for seven days until we buried," a local Tibetan boy told me earlier that day. "It happens when it revives, sometimes this happens."