These fascinating pictures show an annual ritual where villagers dig 
up the bodies of their dead relatives before washing, grooming and 
dressing them up in fancy new clothes.
Families in the Indonesian
 province of Toraja in South Sulawesi perform the act to keep their 
relatives alive in their hearts and minds.
As part of the zombie ceremony, even the skeletons of children are exhumed.
Damaged coffins
 are fixed or replaced before the mummies are walked around the area by 
following a path of straight lines during the ritual, called Ma'nene, or
 The Ceremony of Cleaning Corpses.
For Torajans, the death of the body isn’t seen as an abrupt event and attempts are made to keep them part of the family.
Late
 loved ones are tended at home for weeks, months, or even years after 
death and funerals are often delayed to gather relatives.
In Toraja society, the funeral ritual is also most elaborate and expensive event.
According to their ancient belief system, the spirit of a dead person must return to his village of origin.
So if a person died on a journey, the dead person would be walked back home from the scene to the village.
 
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