Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
Mai to sust nahi hoo
doob marna tou susto ko chahiye ![]()
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
Mai to sust nahi hoo
doob marna tou susto ko chahiye ![]()
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
yeh tumhaaraa Khayaal hai yaa is meN shaaiba-e-Haqeeqat bhii hai? ![]()
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
Haqeeqat hai ![]()
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
China
In China there is a belief that for the pregnancy to be successful the husband should carry his wife over burning coal when entering the house. Reading of good literature during pregnancy has positive effect on the unborn child. On the other side it is very bad for the pregnant woman to gossip or laugh loudly.
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
KKF you were talking about this one right.
Zoroastrians “bury” their dead in circular towers to avoid the demon of the dead.
Zoroastrian tradition says that a dead body is unclean, and that the evil corpse demon would rush to a dead body to contaminate it and anything else it came in to contact with. For this reason, the Zoroastrians built towers with a roof containing three concentric rings (one for men, one for women, and one for children) on which they would place the dead bodies until they were completely destroyed by birds and sun. The remaining bones would then be shoved into a central well where they would remain buried inside the tower. This tradition continues to this day in Parsi communities in India. Pictured above are the remains of a tower of silence in Iran.
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
merii story kii khichRii pak rahii hai...jaise hii taiyaar hogii, maiN share karuuNgaa iA :)
Re: Weird Traditions From Around The World .
KKF you were talking about this one right.
Zoroastrians “bury” their dead in circular towers to avoid the demon of the dead.
Zoroastrian tradition says that a dead body is unclean, and that the evil corpse demon would rush to a dead body to contaminate it and anything else it came in to contact with. For this reason, the Zoroastrians built towers with a roof containing three concentric rings (one for men, one for women, and one for children) on which they would place the dead bodies until they were completely destroyed by birds and sun. The remaining bones would then be shoved into a central well where they would remain buried inside the tower. This tradition continues to this day in Parsi communities in India. Pictured above are the remains of a tower of silence in Iran.
where are the pictures?