Did U Know About International Burial Rights? by Jaame ELIn Did U Know About International Burial Rights?, author and researcher Jaame EL unveils a rarely discussed world of land law, sovereignty, and sacred burial traditions that span from the Americas to the farthest ancient territories of Earth. Blending historical insight with modern legal frameworks, the book explores how burial rights transcend borders and how families, communities, and estates can reclaim their ancestral authority over land, lineage, and legacy.
Drawing from the legacies of Ancient Egypt, Atlantean philosophy, and indigenous stewardship laws, Jaame EL challenges readers to see burial not merely as a ritual of loss-but as a restoration of ownership, a rite of return, and a declaration of autonomy. The book compares international burial regulations, property statutes, and trust frameworks across continents, illuminating how individuals can lawfully secure their burial grounds, establish generational sanctuaries, and even qualify for unique tax exemption benefits under existing and historical codes.
Chapter Highlight - "Tax Exemption Benefits"This chapter delivers a powerful and unconventional breakdown of what occurs when one chooses to bury a loved one on private land-whether in the Americas, the Caribbean, the surrounding Territories, or abroad. Through Jaame EL's clear and insightful analysis, readers learn that such an act is not only a spiritual gesture but also a profound legal and economic statement.
The chapter explains how privately maintained burial sites may qualify for property tax exemptions under specific state and international provisions, provided they meet criteria such as family-only use, heritage preservation, or trust designation. It unpacks the legal distinctions between personal property, real property, and consecrated ground, revealing how a burial site transforms into sacred land-a category often protected from taxation, sale, or seizure.
Readers are guided through examples from U. S. statutes, Caribbean common law, and global precedents where burial land has been legally recognized as memorial estates or charitable grounds. Jaame EL discusses how establishing such property within a family trust or nonprofit ecclesiastical framework can extend these protections across generations, creating ancestral wealth shields that align with ancient traditions of land guardianship.
Presented in an epic, unconventional narrative, the chapter bridges law, spirituality, and sovereignty. It invites readers to view burial land not as the end of life, but as the beginning of ownership, a testament to divine inheritance, and a pathway to financial liberation through lawful, sacred exemption.
Did U Know About International Burial Rights? by Jaame ELIn Did U Know About International Burial Rights?, author and researcher Jaame EL unveils a rarely discussed world of land law, sovereignty, and sacred burial traditions that span from the Americas to the farthest ancient territories of Earth. Blending historical insight with modern legal frameworks, the book explores how burial rights transcend borders and how families, communities, and estates can reclaim their ancestral authority over land, lineage, and legacy.
Drawing from the legacies of Ancient Egypt, Atlantean philosophy, and indigenous stewardship laws, Jaame EL challenges readers to see burial not merely as a ritual of loss-but as a restoration of ownership, a rite of return, and a declaration of autonomy. The book compares international burial regulations, property statutes, and trust frameworks across continents, illuminating how individuals can lawfully secure their burial grounds, establish generational sanctuaries, and even qualify for unique tax exemption benefits under existing and historical codes.
Chapter Highlight - "Tax Exemption Benefits"This chapter delivers a powerful and unconventional breakdown of what occurs when one chooses to bury a loved one on private land-whether in the Americas, the Caribbean, the surrounding Territories, or abroad. Through Jaame EL's clear and insightful analysis, readers learn that such an act is not only a spiritual gesture but also a profound legal and economic statement.
The chapter explains how privately maintained burial sites may qualify for property tax exemptions under specific state and international provisions, provided they meet criteria such as family-only use, heritage preservation, or trust designation. It unpacks the legal distinctions between personal property, real property, and consecrated ground, revealing how a burial site transforms into sacred land-a category often protected from taxation, sale, or seizure.
Readers are guided through examples from U. S. statutes, Caribbean common law, and global precedents where burial land has been legally recognized as memorial estates or charitable grounds. Jaame EL discusses how establishing such property within a family trust or nonprofit ecclesiastical framework can extend these protections across generations, creating ancestral wealth shields that align with ancient traditions of land guardianship.
Presented in an epic, unconventional narrative, the chapter bridges law, spirituality, and sovereignty. It invites readers to view burial land not as the end of life, but as the beginning of ownership, a testament to divine inheritance, and a pathway to financial liberation through lawful, sacred exemption.