Anyone up for an invite to this wedding---Four
men in northwest China have been sentenced to prison for the grisly
crime of digging up the corpses of 10 women and selling them for "ghost
marriages."
The grotesque "brides" were sold for a total of
240,000 RMB, or $38,000, according to court reports. The grave robbers
were sentenced to prison terms ranging from two years and four months to
two years and eight months in prison.
The bodies were sought by
families of men who died as bachelors. The buyers were arranging "ghost
marriages," a traditional custom in which parents find "spouses" for
their unmarried, deceased children so that they can have a family in the
afterlife.
The cadavers were stolen from their graves in Ya'an
province beginning in the winter of 2011, according to reports. They
were dug up in the middle of the night and hid in the thieves' homes
where the corpses were cleaned up. Forged medical records were created
in hopes of making it appear the corpses were only recently deceased and
coming from reliable sources, allowing them to charge premium prices.
Ghost marriages are a 3,000 year-old custom that is especially common
in rural parts of north China where young men often die in coal mining
accidents. When a young man dies a bachelor, family members may consider
it unnatural, and fear that the deceased's spirit may be restless.
Wan Jianhong, director of the Institute of Folklore and Cultural
Anthropology at Beijing Normal University, said some folks fear that the
unquiet ghost would come back to haunt them, causing all sorts of
trouble for his family, and searching for a scapegoat replace his death,
so that he could be reborn. Parents hope that by arranging a "ghost
marriage" they could comfort the deceased son's soul, and save him from a
lonely afterlife.
Ghost marriages were outlawed decades ago,
but have been making a comeback as China's economy has boomed. Rural
families are better off and able to afford ghost brides.
Times
have changed since two families would meet and arrange to marry off
their deceased children. Now a new market for brokers, known as "ghost
matchmakers," has sprung up. The price of corpses on the black market
can reach as high as thousands of dollars. The younger, prettier and
more recently deceased a female corpse is, the higher the price she
commands.
A growing demand for fresh female corpses has fueled the trade in bodysnatching.
Chinese media have reported cases of brokers murdering women and
selling their bodies for ghost marriages. In 2006, a man from northern
Hebei province murdered six women and sold them as "ghost brides."
The Qingming Festival, also known as tomb sweeping day, is coming up
next month. That is the day when people honor their deceased ancestors.
It is also thought to be the most auspicious day for ghost marriages and
engagements.
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