A funeral where you do not need to cry, you may laugh with tears

For more than two and a half hours at the funeral ceremony for old Bush, looking live on television, I've caught myself crying a little bit, and more often I've burst into laughter. At the same time, we Albanians, our funeral ceremonies, are more frightening than [...]
The expression on the way we comfort ourselves in the event of death was also noted with the last case of George H.W.'s death. Bush. Of course, in every language in the world, there are stylistic rules that determine how I express comfort, congratulations, orders, congratulations, thirst. We Albanians, in general, have the togword to the family that echoes a wide range of condolences, whether we are expressing it to a very close friend or the most famous family in America. That's what we've been writing, because there's other strains on the subject of religious congratulation, such as the ancient god, the Sabrin, and so on.
As for the condolences to the Bush family, we can also personally send comfort, but it would be good to have knowledge further, for example, why we admire so much a Bush.
Let's get back to the funerals...
A lot of well-known figures in Kosovo have died since I started working as a journalist and I've been watching them all over again. Mortore ceremonies are frightening to us. Mortore ceremonies are more frightening than death itself. In a funeral case, it's not a written rule but we understand by gestures and actions that we are forbidden to laugh. We are forbidden to smile.
Why is that?
The culture of mortar ceremonies that everyone may have seen in the event that we have lost a loved one in death does not stand out even when a well - known figure of state dies. The fact that we have failed to overcome the style that is painted by sentences that may have started somewhere in Communism is shown at each or anniversary of any known figure in Kosovo (and other Albanian regions, perhaps even across the Balkans). So as for the dead, we must exalt him with the most serious and the greatest of words known to mankind.
Do you remember any mortary ceremony of any familiar figure, where someone has removed memories of it (the deceased), beyond what you could potentially find as information on the most tired website of the search machine: Wikipedia.
Our heroes: Adem Jashar, Adem Demach, Zahir Pajazit, and though not even figures like Ibrahim Rugova and others, we are often not communicated with the rest of their lives. What are these heroes laughing at? When did they get nervous with their son or daughter? What has been happening to those around the world that has been transmitted to our funeral and anniversary ceremonies and across the world that we can find in any book, in any song, or beyond the monotonous speeches: Kosovo will always remember with the pillars.










