The Cathars: Cathar Beliefs: Ceremonies: Endura
This is not really a rite or ceremony, so much as
a practise amounting to voluntary euthenasia. The Occitan word
Endura translates as "fasting".
In certain circumstances, believers would take the Consolamentum
and then starve themselves to death. This might be done
for example during an extended terminal illness, or in expectation
of falling into the hands of the Inquisitors. Why hang around
in hell,
when freedom is only a few days away?
Although
the practise is entirely in line with Cathar theology, and is attested in contemporary
documentary evidence, there is some doubt about how common it was. Since
Catholics regarded suicide as a great sin, they seem to have made the most of
one of their two charges that were genuine, villifying those who practised it.
(The other was using contraception). Many Catholic works, even modern ones, make
out that suicide was a routine and frequent practise. In fact there is no evidence
that suicide was more common among Cathars than it was, or still is, among Catholics.
The only known difference was the level of acceptance in the two communities.
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