Cultural and religious perspective of loss and bereavement in Anatolia

Authors

  • Fuat Tanhan Yüzüncü Yıl University
  • Süleyman Kasap Ministry of Education
  • Fırat Ünsal Ministry of Education

Keywords:

Anatolia, Culture, Loss, Death, Bereavement

Abstract

Coping with death is a grueling job to be done however it is not impossible. All cultures have developed ways to cope with death. Interfering with these practices may interfere with the necessary grieving processes. Understanding different cultures' and religions response to death can help counselors recognize the grieving process in patients of other cultures. It is also important to realize that, while each individual grief process is unique, there is a form of grief that is disabling, interfering with function and quality of life. A great majority of the people in Anatolia have remained under the influence of tradition as well as religion. In the foundation of main behavior models which forms our traditional life, ensuring them to possess specialty and formation however there lays numerous customs, beliefs and ethic operations. So that such kind of variations affects the death and the bereavement customs. As in the case of the three important event of the life, a great number of beliefs, customs, tradition, ceremonies, and behaviors have been also grouped around death. Such beliefs, customs, transactions, ceremonies and pattern behaviors which accumulated around the death and surrounded individuals with the death are collected under three groups. Sets of traditions formed as pre-death, during death and after death. So this study was carried out so as to determine the approach of Anatolian traditions to the death and bereavement. This qualitative research was conducted by means of semi-structured interviews in which   three questions prepared by the researchers and were asked to four volunteer male participants whose mean age was seventy-five years old. The study concludes that the traditions of Anatolia give importance to sharing and supporting the family of deceased, which overlaps the literature of bereavement process psychology.

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Author Biographies

Fuat Tanhan, Yüzüncü Yıl University

Assoc. Prof. Dr.,  Yuzuncu Yil University, Education Faculty, Department of Education Sciences

Süleyman Kasap, Ministry of Education

Dr.,  Ministry of Education

Fırat Ünsal, Ministry of Education

M.D., Ministry of Education

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Published

2016-10-21

How to Cite

Tanhan, F., Kasap, S., & Ünsal, F. (2016). Cultural and religious perspective of loss and bereavement in Anatolia. Journal of Human Sciences, 13(3), 4181–4187. Retrieved from https://j-humansciences.com/ojs/index.php/IJHS/article/view/3892

Issue

Section

Social Psychology