Mutilation

Why having human remains land on the Moon poses difficult questions for members of several religions

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

Sending human remains to the Moon on the first commercial lunar lander, Peregrine 1, on Jan. 8, 2024, along with scientific instruments, caused a controversy.

Key Points: 
  • Sending human remains to the Moon on the first commercial lunar lander, Peregrine 1, on Jan. 8, 2024, along with scientific instruments, caused a controversy.
  • The inside of the lander was to be a kind of “space burial” for remains of some 70 people.
  • Each of the families had paid over US$12,000 for a permanent memorial on the Moon.

Jewish death rituals and purification

  • There were many ways in which one could become ritually unclean, and each level of pollution was cleansed by an appropriate purification rite.
  • After the Romans destroyed the Temple in 70 C.E., Jewish religious practice changed dramatically, including rules about purification.
  • These days, after a burial or visit to a cemetery, many Jewish people wash their hands to wash away negative spirits or energy.

Christian death rituals over the centuries

  • Corpses or cremated remains were interred in burial places outside cities and town – in the necropolis, literally a city of the dead.
  • As monotheists, Christians rejected belief in the Greek and Roman gods and goddesses, including the Moon goddess called Selene or Luna.
  • They also refused to participate in Roman state religious rituals or activities based on pagan polytheism.
  • Unlike some other religions, neither Judaism nor Christianity considers the Moon divine or sacred.
  • In both Jewish and Christian spiritual writing, the Moon is used as a spiritual analogy: in Judaism, of the majesty of God, and in Christianity, of Christ and the church.

Islamic beliefs on burial

  • After death, the deceased is ritually washed, wrapped in shrouds and brought for burial in a cemetery as soon as possible.
  • The soul of the deceased is said to visit their loved ones on the seventh and 40th days after death.
  • In September 2007, when the first Muslim astronaut from Malaysia got ready to go into space, the Malaysian National Space Agency published religious directives on burial rituals for Muslims in space.

Hindu and Buddhist funerary practices

  • Hinduism is a diverse religion, and so funeral practices often vary according to culture and context.
  • Most commonly, death and the period following a person’s death are associated with ritual pollution.
  • In the many forms of Buddhism, death provides an opportunity for mourners to reflect on the impermanence of all things.


In older forms of Buddhism in Nepal and Tibet, the Moon was understood to be identified with the god Chandra, who rides on a chariot. The Moon is also one of the nine astrological deities whose movement provides insight for reckoning individual and collective futures.

Difficult questions

  • Peregrine 1 never made its soft landing on the Moon because of an engine malfunction, and its payload was destroyed after entering the atmosphere.
  • As more people decide to send their ashes into space, however, religious conflicts are bound to arise.


The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

The book that haunts me – seven experts on the scariest thing they’ve ever read

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, October 17, 2023

It lurks in long evening shadows, calls out through mysterious bumps in the night and blows down your neck whenever you feel a sudden shiver.

Key Points: 
  • It lurks in long evening shadows, calls out through mysterious bumps in the night and blows down your neck whenever you feel a sudden shiver.
  • With Halloween approaching, we asked six of our academic experts to tell us about the scariest book they’ve ever read.

A Dictionary of Monsters and Mysterious Beasts, by Carey Miller (1974)

    • Lady Macbeth says it’s “The eye of childhood / That fears a painted devil.” She’s right.
    • I bought A Dictionary of Monsters and Mysterious Beasts at a school book fair when I was seven.
    • Miller’s book was undeniably a landmark in the development of my literary interests.

The Flypaper, by Elizabeth Taylor (1969)

    • “Scary” is too glib a word for the chillingly believable conclusion of the author Elizabeth Taylor’s short story, The Flypaper.
    • It starts with 11-year-old Sylvia, unloved and unlovely, riding the bus to her hated music lesson in the drab outskirts of a provincial town.
    • When a man starts harassing her, she is reassured by a middle-aged lady who she feels is “keeping an eye on the situation”.

Dracula, by Bram Stoker (1897)

    • Reading Bram Stoker’s Dracula was an unsettling experience I can’t forget.
    • The story unfolds through journal entries and letters, revolving around a young solicitor who discovers that his client is a vampire.
    • You know that feeling when something is so terrifying yet beautiful that you can’t look away?

The Haunting of Hill House, by Shirley Jackson (1959)

    • “Hill House is vile, it is diseased,” muses protagonist Eleanor Vance, on approach to the titular manor of Shirley Jackson’s 1959 novel The Haunting of Hill House.
    • Jackson, like me, suffered from parasomnias such as sleepwalking and nightmares, and there are moments in The Haunting of Hill House where the spookiness manifests itself through Vance’s sleep and dream-like trance states.

Things We Lost in the Fire, by Mariana Enríquez, translated by Megan McDowell (2016)

    • A book that still scares me whenever I think of it is Things We Lost in the Fire, a 2016 short story collection by Argentine writer Mariana Enríquez.
    • The stories take conventional horror tropes – murder, mutilation, abuse, the occult – and weave them into contemporary tales of Buenos Aires.
    • The stories shift between satirical realism and brutal surrealism, often when you least expect it.

The Woman in Black, by Susan Hill (1983)

    • A place miles away from the nearest house or village where, as cliche as it sounds, there is no one to hear you scream.
    • Susan Hill’s The Woman in Black serves as a truly haunting example of this.
    • Lawyer Arthur Kipps is hired to settle the estate of the late Alice Drablow and embarks on a trip to her home, Eel Marsh House.

Les Chants de Maldoror, by Isidore Ducasse (1868-1869)

    • Written under the pen name Comte de Lautreamont, Isidore Ducasse’s Les Chants de Maldoror (The Songs of Maldoror) did not scare me, but its images have long haunted me.
    • This deranged and surreal work takes readers into the mind of Maldoror, a misanthropic wanderer who revels in his unrepentant evil.
    • The book’s self-described “poison-filled pages” have a nightmarish quality throughout, with disturbing and yet sometimes darkly poetic descriptions of murder, malice and madness.

Wartime hijinks, wilderness survivors and contemporary dance: what we're streaming this October

Retrieved on: 
Sunday, October 1, 2023

If you’ve made your way through our September picks and are looking for something new, this month’s streaming picks have something for everyone. There is a classic romantic comedy, some British crime drama and even some contemporary dance. The weather might be turning, and the sun might be shining – but these picks will have you wanting to spend some more time on the couch. Yellowjackets season twoIn season one, a high-school girls’ soccer team survive a plane crash in the Canadian wilderness.

Key Points: 


If you’ve made your way through our September picks and are looking for something new, this month’s streaming picks have something for everyone. There is a classic romantic comedy, some British crime drama and even some contemporary dance. The weather might be turning, and the sun might be shining – but these picks will have you wanting to spend some more time on the couch.

Yellowjackets season two

    • In season one, a high-school girls’ soccer team survive a plane crash in the Canadian wilderness.
    • Season two introduces Lauren Ambrose and Elijah Wood to the cast.
    • Central to this season is the power Lottie (Courtney Eaton/Simone Kessell) has over the group.
    • – Stuart Richards

      Read more:
      Cannibalism, mutilation and murder: the Australian calamities that rival Yellowjackets for survival horror

The Way Home

    • The Way Home tells the story of three generations of women coming to terms with their trauma and how it has shaped their past and present.
    • If you enjoy Christmas movies where a pretty, white heterosexual woman returns home to be conveniently reunited with a lost love, then The Way Home is for you.
    • Ultimately, The Way Home is more enjoyable than the sum of its parts.

Am I

    • The dancers are all in black with only their feet, arms and faces visible, accentuating the shapes made by their upper bodies.
    • The backdrop is a wall of golden white light bulbs, which light in different patterns: at times a pixelated digital screen, other times an exploding sun.
    • They move through sequences using silver rods to produce line drawings in two dimensions, then three-dimensional clusters and networks.

While the Men Are Away

    • Well-meaning Gwen falls instantly for Frankie; the intense Esther is soon exchanging meaningful looks with Robert.
    • The costumes and production design have a soft-focus, Women’s Weekly glamour – a far cry from rationing and making do.
    • While the Men Are Away is a fantasy of queer visibility and acceptance, but the uneven script, churning plot and the often-didactic tone undermine its ambitions.

Annika season two

    • Neon (New Zealand); season one is available in Australia on iView and BritBox The second season of offbeat BBC police procedural Annika stands apart in a genre that usually veers towards silliness or misanthropy.
    • Season one followed the establishment of Glasgow’s specialist Maritime Homicide Unit, a small and unflappable team, which spends its time fishing bodies out of Scottish waterways and solving odd coastal crimes.
    • This is all while Annika navigated the prickly relationship with her teen daughter Morgan.

Six NYFA Alumni Chosen as Official Selections at 2022 Micheaux Film Festival’s 4th Edition

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, July 21, 2022

Included among the festivals official selections were six films by New York Film Academy (NYFA) alumni.

Key Points: 
  • Included among the festivals official selections were six films by New York Film Academy (NYFA) alumni.
  • Its diversity of film programming, people, and its unique and disruptive marketing style make it worthwhile for all filmmakers to attend.
  • Its truly fantastic that so many NYFA alumni were official selections at Micheaux this year, said Crickett Rumley, Senior Director of NYFAs Film Festival Department.
  • New York Film Academy congratulates its alumni on their official selections at this years fourth edition of the Micheaux Film Festival and their well-deserved recognition.

Infinit Care Shares Why Mental Health Support is Essential for Content Moderators

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, May 26, 2022

MANILA, Philippines, May 26, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Protecting the Protectors: Why Mental Health Support is Essential for Content Moderators

Key Points: 
  • MANILA, Philippines, May 26, 2022 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Protecting the Protectors: Why Mental Health Support is Essential for Content Moderators
    Being on the internet has become a regular part of our everyday life.
  • Some examples of banned content that content moderators screen are those that contain sexual themes, drugs, bigotry, homophobia, harassment, and racism.
  • On top of that, Mangulabnan also suggests creating proper escalation procedures for concerns relating to the mental health challenges of content moderators.
  • Infinit Care is a mental health-tech company that helps companies and organization provide comprehensive mental health care support to their employees through the use of science-backed methodologies and technology.

ANCA-WR Marks Anniversary of Azerbaijan's Invasion of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)

Retrieved on: 
Friday, September 24, 2021

Hundreds of prisoners of war and civilian captives remain in Azerbaijan's illegal detention to this day, where they continue to face severe abuse and torture .

Key Points: 
  • Hundreds of prisoners of war and civilian captives remain in Azerbaijan's illegal detention to this day, where they continue to face severe abuse and torture .
  • Azerbaijan has also continued its policy of belligerency towards Armenia through its continued state-sponsored propagation of anti-Armenian racism (Armenophobia).
  • Despite widespread reports of Azerbaijan's violations of international humanitarian law, the response of the international community to the brazen act of aggression has been nothing short of negligent.
  • Azerbaijan's conduct since the end of the war has not inspired confidence that a peaceful resolution to this crisis is on the horizon.

Wera Hobhouse asks Government about FGM legislation

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Wera Hobhouse asks urgent question on female genital mutilation legislation

Key Points: 
  • Following Sir Christopher Chope's objection to the second reading of theChildren Act 1989 (Amendment) (Female Genital Mutilation) Bill, Wera Hobhouse is to ask an urgent question to the Government on legislation against female genital mutilation.
  • The Children Act 1989 (Amendment) (Female Genital Mutilation) Bill is a Private Members' Bill was scheduled to have its second reading in the Commons on Friday 8 February 2019.
  • However, due to the objection from Conservative MP for Christchurch, Sir Christopher Chope, the Bill was denied a second reading.
  • The Bill is to enable the courts to make interim care orders under the Children Act 1989 in child cases relating to FGM.

Wera Hobhouse asks Government about FGM legislation

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Wera Hobhouse asks urgent question on female genital mutilation legislation

Key Points: 
  • Following Sir Christopher Chope's objection to the second reading of theChildren Act 1989 (Amendment) (Female Genital Mutilation) Bill, Wera Hobhouse is to ask an urgent question to the Government on legislation against female genital mutilation.
  • The Children Act 1989 (Amendment) (Female Genital Mutilation) Bill is a Private Members' Bill was scheduled to have its second reading in the Commons on Friday 8 February 2019.
  • However, due to the objection from Conservative MP for Christchurch, Sir Christopher Chope, the Bill was denied a second reading.
  • The Bill is to enable the courts to make interim care orders under the Children Act 1989 in child cases relating to FGM.

Take action to eliminate female genital mutilation by 2030

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, February 6, 2019

"This effort is especially critical because female genital mutilation leads to long-term physical, psychological and social consequences.

Key Points: 
  • "This effort is especially critical because female genital mutilation leads to long-term physical, psychological and social consequences.
  • "In 2015, world leaders overwhelmingly backed the elimination of female genital mutilation as one of the targets in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
  • Governments in countries where female genital mutilation is prevalent should also develop national action plans to end the practice.
  • "Thanks to the collective action of governments, civil society, communities and individuals, female genital mutilation is in decline.

Joint Statement on the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Female Genital Mutilation is a severe violation of human rights and of women's physical integrity.

Key Points: 
  • Female Genital Mutilation is a severe violation of human rights and of women's physical integrity.
  • The European Union is at the forefront of global efforts to end Female Genital Mutilation by 2030.
  • Female Genital Mutilation is a form of violence againt women criminalised under the Council of Europe Istanbul Convention.