JW funerals are weird. Ive had so many good and bad experiences. Although I disagree that all services are canned speeches that are identical. I know personally that my step-father was always sought out to give memorial services for both JW and non-JWs on my mothers side as he had a decidely meek and compassionate manner about him and would not use funerals as an opportunity to preach. On two occasions when we buried JWs on my mom's side they specifically asked for him on their death beds, and were very specific in what they wanted said, in terms of their hope in the resurrection. I guess he was just respecting their wishes.
Here are two that happened to me recently, on my father's side of the family:
My grandfather, who was never a JW, died, leaving behind my grandmother, a devoted JW all her life pretty much (and one with a heart of gold, god bless her), and a mix of JWs, xJW and never-JW children. My father wanted to say a few words at the funeral, which was going to be held in a KH. My uncle, the firstborn of the family and an elder, was coordinating everything and said that my father was not going to be allowed to speak from the platform at the KH. Rightfully so, most of the family thought this insane as Grandpa had never been a JW (just sympathetic, you know, the assemby/memorial attending type). So two days before the funeral the venue was moved to a local funeral home. The elder who was giving the talk still came and delivered a moving speech, very neutral in terms of any form of doctrinal stuff, and also attended the viewings, very warmly greeting me and my father, who was very vocally anti-JW for many years (well until he became RC and calmed down alot). My father was able to give his eulogy and then after the funeral there was a wake at my Grandma's house that the JWs in her congregation catered all the food and everything for. We all went and notably my father and uncle had a very long chat and apparently resolved some major life-long grudges they had harbored against each other, some JW-related, some not.
The deaths didnt stop there though, as a couple of months later the same uncle who was adamant that my father could not speak at the KH suffered a stroke and died the next day. I dont know exactly what had happened between him and my father the day that we buried my Grandpa but I was pretty amazed to see not only my uncle's funeral held at a KH, with the same clan of JWs, xJWs and never-JWs present, but also to see my once 'apostate' father get up and deliver a eulogy to his brother. Oh, and one other notable memory was my great-uncle, a Catholic priest, sitting in the second row in full RC garb, very disrespectfully scowling and pretending to be asleep with his chin in his chest during the entire service.
Edited by - bonovox on 17 June 2002 13:29:36