According to funeral industry insiders, 'no-wake' funeralsโwhere you skip the traditional visitation periodโare becoming a major trend. This style focuses on the essentials like housing the body, placing it in the casket, and the final send-off without receiving outside mourners. It gained traction during COVID when gatherings were restricted, but now it's solidifying into a new cultural norm. Yoon Young-jin, CEO of Jeongdo Funeral Services, noted that 'The negative stigmaโthinking only people in financial trouble do it, or that itโs being a "disrespectful child" by not letting friends say goodbyeโis disappearing.' He added that his companyโs cases doubled from 100 last year to 200 this year.
A housewife in her 50s from Osan, Gyeonggi Province, who held a no-wake funeral for her father in May, said, 'We only notified people who absolutely needed to know and spent the time mourning as a family. The total cost paid to the funeral home was about 800,000 KRW ($600).' She explained that they sent her father to the morgue via hearse and the family only met back up at the funeral home for the final send-off to the crematorium. 'Not only was the financial burden lower, but I loved that we could focus on grieving together as a family instead of putting on a formal show for a crowd,' she said.
Scattering ashes in nature (sanbun-jang) is also on the rise instead of using columbariums. Industry experts point to the legalization of sea burials in January and the fact that nuclear families find it harder to regularly visit and maintain gravesites. Kim Shin, Director at Family Funeral, said, 'Previously, only 1 in 10 customers asked about ash scattering; now it's 1 in 7 or 8. Not only does it save money, but many deceased people prefer it because of the idea of "returning to nature."'
Additionally, as burial culture shifts to cremation, the trend is moving away from expensive hemp shrouds toward silk Hanbok that could even be worn during life at celebrations. Some people even choose to wear their favorite everyday clothes as their final outfit instead of a traditional shroud.
Hemp shrouds actually became common during the Japanese colonial era in 1934, when the Governor-General of Korea enforced 'Ritual Rules' that banned silk and forced the use of hemp. According to the 1474 etiquette manual 'Gukjo Orye-ui,' the tradition was actually to use 'the best clothes the deceased wore in life,' which were usually silk or cotton.
Funerals are emotional, but legal requirements must be met. Key points under the Act on Funeral Services: - Cremation is prohibited within 24 hours of death. You can't cremate on the day of death; a minimum 2-day schedule is required. - Death certificates or post-mortem examination reports are mandatory. - Use of a morgue and casket-loading room is required. You can skip the wake hall (the altar/visitation room), but you must have a space to house the body. Therefore, even for a 'no-wake' funeral, a 2-day schedule is legally necessary, and the casket and send-off procedures must take place at a funeral home or public facility.
"Users are having a 'mind-blown' moment realizing hemp shrouds are a colonial-era leftovers and are fully embracing the 'no-wake' and 'favorite clothes' funeral trends to save money and skip the social performativity."
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