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| Photos by JP/Agung Parameswara | 
That may explain the Balinese’ obsession  with death. The way people die, the way they greet death, and, most  importantly, how their community treat their death often eclipses the  way they spend their life. 
For members of the ksatriya (royal  family and warrior class), dying in a bloody battle is certainly a more  noble end than meeting your maker on a sickbed. 
For the brahmana  (high priest class) having prior knowledge of the exact hour and day of  one’s death and a tranquil manner in accepting one’s own death are  viewed as ultimate signs of spiritual mastery. 
Yet death is not  merely a personal event. In Bali death is also a very public event. The  responsibility for organizing death-related rituals does not fall on the  deceased’s family, but on the deceased’s traditional communities —  banjar (hamlet) or desa pekraman (customary village). 
  The size of the post-mortem ritual and the number of people involved  are and indication of the deceased’s social stature as well as the level  of support he or she enjoyed from members of the traditional 
communities.
communities.
For decades the island’s royal families have used post-mortem  rituals, and any other rituals for that matter, not only as a medium to  pay their tribute to the deceased members of their respective royal  houses, but also as a vehicle to display their economic achievements,  political sphere of influences and social stature.
Peliatan is one of the three powerful royal houses in Gianyar. The other two are Ubud and Gianyar.
Thanks  to the royal houses’ patronage, traditional institutions, such as  customary villages, art troupes and religious institutions have  succeeded in remaining political and social influences. 
The  current regent of Gianyar is a member of Ubud’s royal house while the  future king of Peliatan, Tjokorda Gde Putra Nindia, now serves as the  regency’s secretary, the third highest government official in the  region.
Hundreds of people from Peliatan, Ubud, and the surrounding villages have worked for months to prepare the cremation.
The  120-household-strong Pande (blacksmith) clan of Peliatan presented a  gigantic wooden sarcophagus in the form of white bull with gold-plated  horns for the cremation. The clan’s elder Pande Wayan Sutedja Neka  summoned the clan’s best artisans from outside Bali to craft the biggest  bull sarcophagus.
 “The present underlines the strong historical and emotional bonds  between Peliatan’s royal house and the Pande clan,” Neka said, adding  that his ancestors had served as the court blacksmith for Ida Dewa Agung  Peliatan III.
  “The present underlines the strong historical and emotional bonds  between Peliatan’s royal house and the Pande clan,” Neka said, adding  that his ancestors had served as the court blacksmith for Ida Dewa Agung  Peliatan III.The royal family’s influence and its bonds with the traditional  communities were more evident on the day of the cremation, with as many  as 6,800 men from 30 hamlets participating in the cremation as the  pallbearers. They took turn in carrying the 25-meter tall Bade cremation  tower, the naga banda and the white bull sarcophagus.
The  elaborately decorated Bade with 11 pyramid-shaped tiers, glittering  paraphernalia, thousands of uniform white t-shirts and meals packages  distributed to everybody involved in the ritual were a clear testimony  of the Peliatan royal family’s wealth and social stature.
It was a  grandiose ritual that succeeded in hypnotizing thousands of people,  from locals to foreign visitors and awestruck journalists. 
Yet,  at the end of the ritual, when fiery flames of fire consumed the  sarcophagus and the king’s body inside it, when exhausted pallbearers  silently deserted the cemetery, when the commotion succumbed to the  descending night, one was reminded of the transient nature of  everything. 
The glittering Bade, the social status, the political  influences, and human life are all ephemeral. At the end of the day,  the king journeyed alone to the after-life, unaccompanied and unadorned.   

 
 
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