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Cost of death in a village in Buriram


Sandboxer

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30 minutes ago, Sandboxer said:

GFs brother-in-law dropped dead last night. Poor guy was only 35. Super nice the few times I met him, hard working, 2 kids+wife. Family is a typical farming family i.e. they ow a bit of land, a good herd of buffalo, a few rai of rubber trees. So they do ok and live a relatively decent standard of life. 

 

Question - how much ROUGHLY will this whole death process cost? The ceremonial stuff, feeding the villagers (probably about 300 of them) who come to pay respects, temple costs + cremation.

 

Any guesses appreciated.

 

And before the jokers here comment the obvious - no, I'm not contributing any money for this. I already bought both my gf's husband AND boyfriend a house each, so I think I'm off the hook for a while.

 

 

Mrs dad died in Surin Village in 2011, dirt poor but they spent 400k allegedly, depends how much they want to show off and how many to feed. Last funeral I went to in Bkk cost millions of Baht

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There's a village death fund as mentioned above that every member of the village pays into their whole life that covers the basic expenses. (20-50 baht per month) Donations are collected at the final temple service before escorting the deceased to the furnace. These are in envelopes so there's no monetary marker saying how much is in each 1. The family is responsible for for the after-chamber (the tall shrine-like thing that holds the ashes and a picture - don't recall the Thai name).

Have buried grandma, a nephew and a sister and they all went into the same family shrine.

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Depends a lot. Where I am the village does not have a funeral fund. My wife's mother has her own bank account saving for her funeral. She already paid to have her ashes put in the temple wall. My wife's father's ashes are in the "ghost house" on our land, so no payment for "keeping" at the temple. I have heard that the very rich hire professional mourners to sit and cry at the funeral.

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5 hours ago, mrwebb8825 said:

There's a village death fund as mentioned above that every member of the village pays into their whole life that covers the basic expenses. (20-50 baht per month) Donations are collected at the final temple service before escorting the deceased to the furnace. These are in envelopes so there's no monetary marker saying how much is in each 1. The family is responsible for for the after-chamber (the tall shrine-like thing that holds the ashes and a picture - don't recall the Thai name).

Have buried grandma, a nephew and a sister and they all went into the same family shrine.

I think they call them 'columns'. We had two deaths (my mother-in-law and my brother-in-law) within a few weeks last year. Mother-in-law was keeping four cremation urns in her house so we bought a column which was installed at our nearest temple and now all six have been placed inside it.

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7 hours ago, OneMoreFarang said:

There are no clear rules.

Some families spend little, some want to have a big and long party. 

IMHO you should contribute, but you don't have to be the big spender.

Sometimes part of the cost is also covered by some kind of death insurance which many Thais seem to have.

Often called 'funeral insurance', very common in rural villages. 

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17 minutes ago, scorecard said:

Often called 'funeral insurance', very common in rural villages. 

My Mrs had three (now down to two) life insurance policies with; www.ThaiLife.com Policies taken out with a local insurance agent who also collects the monthly premiums.

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8 hours ago, novacova said:

Sorry, am I reading this correctly? Or is this a typo?

 

8 hours ago, brianthainess said:

Ok then :coffee1: how old is your boyfriend? :unsure:

I guess I have one of those sense of humors that is not easily understood by everyone.????

 

To everyone who replied with all this seriously valuable info both publicly and via PM, thank you. I now know the amount I feel ok to (again, entirely voluntarily without having been asked for dime) contribute without going into extremes either way (and that's really what it's about in this place sometimes, isn't it,,,)

 

Edited by Sandboxer
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Just for clarification: Life Insurance and Death Insurance (or whatever it is called) are two different things.

 

The idea about the death insurance is to pay for the funeral.

The idea about the life insurance is to provide the bereaved with money to continue to live (maybe without the main person who created income in the family). 

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4 minutes ago, OneMoreFarang said:

Just for clarification: Life Insurance and Death Insurance (or whatever it is called) are two different things.

 

The idea about the death insurance is to pay for the funeral.

The idea about the life insurance is to provide the bereaved with money to continue to live (maybe without the main person who created income in the family). 

Thanks for this. Maybe something lost in translation with me. I've never looked into a 'Funeral Plan' as they seem to be termed in the UK. The three policies my Mrs took out appear to all be the same, with a twenty-year term. Does that mean they can't be funeral plans? Surprisingly, the insurance agent said that my medical history was irrelevant. Or maybe she just said that to sell the policy? My Mrs got paid out without any difficulty when her Mum died.

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1 hour ago, prakhonchai nick said:

Families generally splash out more for a farang funeral than for a Thai funeral, despite, in most cases, the deceased farang wanting nothing more that a simple cremation.

 

What I have always failed to understand is why is there the necessity to feed the local villagers morning noon and night for the days leading up to the funeral and the day after. Yes, maybe they drop 100bt in an envelope, but in most cases it does not cover the cost of the unnecessary food, which the majority collect in bags and take away 3 times a day.

 

If only I could find a way to prevent all this nonsense when my time comes.

I know of one recently and the amount of food was unnecessary in my view, they didn't know what to do with it all my wife took our Burmese maid to help and they gave her that much food to take home she could feed the camp, 

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