
“Death isn’t happening to you. Death is happening to us all.” Mortician and author Caitlin Doughty precisely hits the nail on the head with this line because it renders mortality collective, not a cliff edge a person alone; rather, a collective horizon.
Such horizon remains full of narratives. Three out of every five adults in the United States claim that there is life after death and in dozens of countries the religious conceptualizations tend to be maintained even in the face of a weaker hold of a formal religion. What has been created is a world of afterlife maps: some warm, some harsh, lots of them disconcertingly practical.
They vary in the specifics, yet they are inclined to respond to the same questions that are posed by humans: Who judges? What gets carried forward? And what can the living, or rather nothing, do with the dead?

1. Christianity: segregation, purification and the fire of affection
Christian traditions tend to imagine a moral triage – either communion with God or alienation with God, whereas contemporary theologians tend to focus on hell as a place of self-imposed division as opposed to a door to heaven. Where purgatory is taught, it is less a second life and rather a purgative passage: what cannot exist in divine existence is destroyed. In this lens, the fire is a purification, not a spectacle, and the drama is both interior as well as it is cosmic.

2. Islam: a social pace paradise
The Islamic accounts about Jannam are notoriously dramatic, and the best details can be the most basic ones. One such custom is of a market on a Friday in Paradise–a market which, assembling without buying or selling, a wind spreads the smell of perfume, and the people bring back their families fresh and beautified. In this image eternity does not become homogenous, it contains motion, re-unification and a sense of being re-created.

3. Judaism: Gehinnom as purification, and the reason 11 months of mourning
Judaism tends to push the afterlife into the background and ethical living into the foreground, but taught later of Gehinnom as a short, corrective experience as opposed to eternal suffering. There is a popular conception that the period of mourning is up to 12 months and this influences the mourning process: In most Ashkenazi societies, the mourners recite Kaddish over 11 months, in order not to suggest that the parent had the full 12 months. In this opinion, the living are not buying redemption, they go with the dead with words that glorify and uplift.

4. Hinduism: The court of Yama, biography, and ritual assistance
The Hindu literature contains several afterlife systems, but one of the most drastic ones is the journey of Garuda Purana to the land of Yama. The journey is said to be tough and processional with the soul being taken to judgment with actions being assessed by a celestial book-keeper. Certainly, certain passages stress the idea that the funeral rites (in particular, offerings of the family members) contribute to the passing of the soul, such as offering pinda (rice balls) that would stabilize the traveler and accelerate his journey. The message behind it is not mystery in itself, but moral continuity, whose results are experienced after the final breath.

5. Buddhism: the hells of hot and cold, psychological reading
Cosmology Buddhism has a system of hells with several cold hells, which were characterized as a land of tearing flesh and numbness. However, as is common to many modern Buddhist instructors, these images are sent to be experienced now, and not as after-death destinations: states of consciousness formed by hatred, craving and delusion. The argument is the same in either direction, that misery has its reasons and is relieved by knowledge and action and not by purchase.

6. Jainism: karma weight, liberation rising
Jain believed not to consider karma as moral accounting but believes that karma is a sort of material that sticks with the soul. Freedom is obtained by strict nonviolence and strict discipline in lifestyle which eliminates karmic accumulation until the soul is free. It is the individual who awakens and is free and rises to Siddhasila at the summit of the universe at the end of the usual image, the fully purified soul. The hereafter is not a courtroom, but rather a physics of purity.

7. Sikhism: 8.4 million forms and the human rare opportunity
According to Sikh doctrine, there is a lengthy rebirth process, consisting of 8.4 million reincarnations of the self, with human existence being a valuable period, where recollection of the divine can put an end to the process. Its focus is on the present way of living of a person service, humility, and devotion, since the human level is addressed as a one-time only opening: a way of leaving repetition into meeting Waheguru.

8. Zoroastrianism: the Chinvat Bridge and the stare of a dog
Zoroastrianism presents the afterlife like a crossing. Every soul goes to the Chinvat Bridge to be examined; to the righteous, the Bridge is broadened, whereas to the wicked it becomes narrow as a blade of reason. The sagdid, the glance of the dog, is also described textually, where a dog, preferably one with markings on it that make it look as if it has four eyes, is drawn towards the body during a funeral. In subsequent descriptions, there are two dogs that protect the Chinvat Bridge and the soul encounters Daena, who is a representation of ones conscience. The process is ethical, yet relational: the self is exposed to the self.

9. The Taoism and Chinese folk religion: paper goods, money and bureaucracy
The afterlife according to Chinese folk practice is pictured as administratively familiar, administratively familiar, courts, administrators, stages, delays, and offerings are meant to assist the loved ones in their passage through that system. Families set ablaze joss paper hell bank notes and even paper imitations of comforts of everyday life and consider smoke as a form of delivery. According to one of the accounts, when Chinese hyperinflation occurred in the 1940s, denominations mushroomed in resounding earthly economics in a spiritual key. The ritual is a manifestation of nurturance, whether at a literal or symbolic level: the dead are not left to the vagaries of scarcity.

10. The Bahai religion: death is birth, virtues are organs
The Baha’i teachings adopt a metaphor of developing: life is a womb phase where such aspects as love, patience, and justice are developed. Death is introduced as passage and not ending- an joining to a broader reality in which what was developed here will be useful. It is no longer about what will happen later, but what is being cultivated now.
In all these traditions the afterlife does not serve as a landscape. It is a mirror of everyday action, grieving practices, family relationships, and the obstinate human desire to maintain meaning even at times when the body is unable to do so.


