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The main purpose of this booklet is twofold: to help Humanists who
are thinking of becoming officiants on a regular basis; and to help
families and friends who are faced with the need to organize a
ceremony themselves at short notice. A third group who may find
parts of it useful are funeral directors coping with funerals where
there is no officiant and the family has no wish to play an active
role.
The booklet aims to set out clearly the basic format of a Humanist
ceremony, to suggest possible readings and turns of phrase, and to
state simply the various practical measures that need to be taken.
In short, it is a straightforward working manual.
" It was] the first funeral I had attended where I felt
comfortable, and comforted
by the words spoken."
" . . . it gave me a sense of great peace."
"To hear others publicly proclaim their love, respect and
admiration for my
husband made the funeral an uplifting experience. Afterwards so
many who had
attended told me that it was the most interesting, most moving,
most relevant
and best funeral that they had ever been to. Their remarks gave me
a great
deal of comfort and I knew that I had treated my husband's atheism
with the
respect and dignity that it deserved."
"A large number of those present, from a wide range of beliefs and
backgrounds,
later expressed what we can only call enthusiasm for an experience
that was
new to them, and in many cases compared very favourable with the
often awkward
and impersonal alternatives with which they were familiar."
"Bearing in mind that this is a form of ceremony which has not yet
gained wide
acceptance, we consider ourselves fortunate . . . to have received
such expert and
personal attention."
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