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A mummy estimated from preliminary investigations to be about 200 years old, sitting in the lotus meditation position, was found in Mongolia on Jan. 27, according to local publication, The Morning News.
It is unclear as of yet the circumstances of the discovery in Songinokhairkhan province, reported The Morning News. The body was found covered in animal skin and has been taken to the Ulaanbataar National Centre of Forensic Expertise in the Mongolian capital for further investigation.
The deceased is speculated to have been a Tibetan lama, perhaps Dashi-Dorzho Itigilov, who was born in 1852, according to the report.
Mummified monk is ‘not dead’ and in rare meditative state, says expert http://t.co/5OfeHq1flX pic.twitter.com/9H2ihNM9Wd
— Siberian Times (@siberian_times) February 2, 2015
The story of Itigilov’s body is a fascinating one. His body has already been “found” a couple of times since his death, so if this is his body, it’s more a case of being “rediscovered.”
Before his death, Itigilov told his students to visit and take a look at his body 30 years after his death, reported the New York Times in 2002.
When he died, he was sitting in the lotus meditation position meditating and chanting a prayer for the dead. The story goes, that when his students did look at his body after 30 years, it had not decayed. At the time, Soviet rule made religious activity difficult and the followers did not draw attention to the body, but concealed it once more.
It was again found in 2002 by a curious young lama named Bimba Dorzhiyev who tracked down Itigilov’s resting place. Dozens of witnesses, two forensic experts, and a photographer attended this unveiling of Itigilov’s body. The New York Times reported, “The lamas who opened the coffin wore surgical masks, but they need not have. Itigilov’s body remained preserved.”
The body was once again secreted away, however, with only lamas permitted to view it.
A practice known as Sokushinbutsu in Japan involved the self-mummification of Buddhist monks. It involved a restricted diet before death and deep meditation. If the monk succeeded in this self-preservation after death, his body would often be placed in a temple to be honored. Success is considered a sign of having reached a spiritual, and also physical, state beyond the frailty of ordinary human life.
Published with permission from Epoch Times
200 years old ‘meditating mummy’ found in Mongolia http://t.co/NNORpJkjjG pic.twitter.com/yy9yNUwRug — Siberian Times (@siberian_times) January 28, 2015
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