June 04, 2010

Hopper gets Indian-style burial

Dennis Hopper laid to rest in simple Native American burial after memorial service attended by Jack Nicholson and Val KilmerThis humble grave--little more than a mound of rocks--is the final resting place of Hollywood legend Dennis Hopper.

The Native American-style burial mound in the Jesus Nazareno Cemetery in Ranchos de Taos, New Mexico, is believed to have been the Easy Rider star's final request.

Flowers and a wreath from well-wishers cover the top of the rubble pile.
Native American burial: Hopper was laid to rest in the traditional grave he had requested

And the only marker identifying the plot is a small plastic wallet with the star's name written on paper skewered into the ground.

The 74-year-old actor, who died on Saturday, was laid to rest at the site in a private ceremony on Wednesday. He died of prostate cancer.

The service was attended by friends and relatives including his friends Jack Nicholson and Val Kilmer.

Before the ceremony, Peter Fonda spoke to the small crowd and opened up about the death of Hopper, his co-star in the iconic Sixties film Easy Rider.
Comment:  Following the link for photos of Hopper and his mourners.

So they left Hopper's casket aboveground and covered it with dirt and rocks? Why not bury it underground instead? The mound looks rather unsightly to me. And I don't think it's more environmentally friendly than an underground burial. The mound takes up more space than a burial plot, not less.

I believe some tribes, especially in the West and Southwest, did bury people this way. They probably had reasons for it: no shovels to dig a hole in the hard ground, no time to linger in potentially hostile territory, etc. I'm not sure anyone believed that burying people aboveground was better than burying them underground.

For more on Dennis Hopper, see Hopper Supported Native Rights. For more on Indian burials, see Nicholson Wants Indian Burial and Indian Burial Grounds.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

"I believe some tribes, especially in the West and Southwest, did bury people this way."

But most preferred cremation to what I gather. In our old ways you were cremated because you had family to make it possible, while if you were buried you died old and alone. ~sal

Marlon Magdalena said...

Above ground? He's underground. It's just a mound of dirt and rubble. The casket should be 6 feet under. That's how they're done.

m. said...

Yeah, this is not typical, and graves marked by mound = they're buried underground, not aboveground.