A beautiful funeral? Yes, it's possible. Oleg Vojtíšek for Marianne magazine.

To borrow the words of Oleg Vojtíšek, their organization's effort is to change something that was perceived as depressing, bad, and terrible into something beautiful that helps and reconciles.

"Fortunately, today you can organize a funeral ceremony according to your wishes," says Oleg Vojtíšek, founder of Funeral Guides, in an interview for Marianne magazine. Those who have done it this way agree that it was a beautiful experience.

"A funeral that is personal helps," confirms my assumption Oleg Vojtíšek, founder of Funeral Guides, an association that helps bereaved families organize a more personal farewell to their deceased.

"It should take place in a place that is connected to the person, where they liked it or where we want to go to remember them. For example, by the river, in the park, in the villa.

With people who loved him and they loved him, or maybe they didn't, but they want to reconcile," he continues.

"What makes me happiest is that people come up with their own ideas about where the ceremony will be and what will happen there. They call us with a specific idea, and we just help them refine it and make it happen. The result is truly their ceremony, personal, reflecting how the deceased lived and how they lived with them," she optimistically notes.

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Close Encounters: Tereza Kostková and Oleg Vojtíšek, Czech Radio: We've Isolated Young People from Death

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How did Tereza prepare for the death of her five-year-old Kryštofek? And how did she prepare him?