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Cryonics Institute -- Funeral Director Guidelines cryonics.org | Talking Watch, Talking Watches, Talking Clock, Talking Bible, Talking... independentliving.com | Talking to Your School Foodservice Director schoolnutrition.org |
A Funeral Director or FD for short is someone who cares and is often the manager of a funeral home. He/she may have apprentices, interns and/or assoiciates that help with the care taking. This person also prepares the body for a viewing, funeral or visitation (sometimes called a wake) by the embalming operation; these persons handle and guide visitors and families through the funeral process. Almost every true FD is extremely passionate and willing to advise and demonstrate professionalism in practice of funeral rites to a spouse or the remaining family of a deceased person when that family has asked for one.
[edit] Worldwide viewThe article discusses the role of funeral directors and related professions in the UK only. Obviously it would be excessive to discuss each of the nearly 200 countries on the planet separately (I for one have no intention of researching the role of funeral directors in Guinea-Bissau, but surely something more general can be said. —Angr 21:07, 24 December 2006 (UTC) Actually I'd say that in at least some respects this doesn't reflect the practice in the UK. For instance I've never heard of embalming being done at the deceased's home. As the reference cited is dated 1953 it may well reflect an older tradition which is not widespread now. Also I may be mis-reading parts of the article, but it seems to imply that the funeral director does themself things that in Britain they would normally just liaise over or not have any responsibility for. e.g. I don't think for a burial the funeral director would be working down to the detail of co-ordinating grave diggers, that would be done by the cemetery staff. It also seems to imply that funeral services often happen at the funeral director's premises, which again seems unusual. And undertakers don't arrange for death certificates here, these are issued when someone registers the death "the law states that a death may be registered by (in this order of preference): A relative of the deceased /A person present at death / The occupier of the house or institution where the death took place, if there is no known relative who is able to register / The person who is arranging the funeral, that is the person instructing the Funeral Director" (This is taken from my parish website, so I guess isn't authorative enough to be a Wikipedia source, but is almost certainly taken from a source that would be good enough.) Perhaps we could clarify what parts of the article reflect specifically USA (or Canadian?) practice. 217.205.245.75 (talk) 01:29, 18 January 2008 (UTC) [edit] See also: Euphemism?Euphemism is in the "See also" list, and I'm wondering how that's directly relevant to this article? ERobson 00:44, 28 July 2007 (UTC) [edit] the wrestlernot here. I was astouded to find a comment about a pro wrestler "the undertaker" in this entry, and immediately deleted it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.16.56.137 (talk) 19:11, 31 August 2007 (UTC) [edit] Scotland a Third World country?I don't believe I've seen an article worse than this in the Wikipedia. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 84.9.120.68 (talk) 00:32, 25 December 2007 (UTC) [edit] Embalming Facts - Wrong?Within the Embalming section it states that many UK families prefer to keep the body at their own home, but I cannot really say this is the case, are there any facts to prove this? Becen (talk) 15:49, 7 March 2008 (UTC) [edit] Redirect?In all honesty, you have to believe that the professional wrestler is more commonly searched on this wiki, and all around generally referenced more then a funeral director. I'm not just saying this because I'm a wrestler or just as a fan in general, but, really, if you would check edit counts that weren't vandalism, or viewing counts the pro-wrestler would win both. KP317 23:52, 30 October 2008 (UTC) |
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