The Egyptian Book of the Dead A guidebook for the underworld Tejal Gala

Ani stands before a large golden scale

where the jackal-headed god
Anubis is weighing his heart

against a pure ostrich feather.

Ani was a real person,

a scribe from the Egyptian city
of Thebes

who lived in the 13th century BCE.

And depicted here is a scene
from his Book of the Dead,

a 78-foot papyrus scroll
designed to help him attain immortality.

Such funerary texts were originally
written only for Pharaohs,

but with time, the Egyptians came
to believe

regular people could also reach
the afterlife

if they succeeded in the passage.

Ani’s epic journey begins with his death.

His body is mummified by a team of priests

who remove every organ except the heart,

the seat of emotion, memory,
and intelligence.

It’s then stuffed with a salt
called natron

and wrapped in resin-soaked linen.

In addition, the wrappings are woven
with charms for protection

and topped with a heart scarab amulet
that will prove important later on.

The goal of the two-month process
is to preserve Ani’s body as an ideal form

with which his spirit
can eventually reunite.

But first, that spirit must pass
through the duat, or underworld.

This is a realm of vast caverns,

lakes of fire,

and magical gates,

all guarded by fearsome beasts -

snakes, crocodiles,
and half-human monstrosities

with names like “he who dances in blood.”

To make things worse, Apep, the serpent
god of destruction,

lurks in the shadows waiting to swallow
Ani’s soul.

Fortunately, Ani is prepared

with the magic contained
within his book of the dead.

Like other Egyptians who could afford it,

Ani customized his scroll to include
the particular spells, prayers, and codes

he thought his spirit might need.

Equipped with this arsenal,

our hero traverses the obstacles,

repels the monsters' acts,

and stealthily avoids Apep

to reach the Hall of Ma’at,
goddess of truth and justice.

Here, Ani faces his final challenge.

He is judged by 42 assessor gods

who must be convinced
that he has lived a righteous life.

Ani approaches each one,

addressing them by name,

and declaring a sin he has not committed.

Among these negative confessions,
or declarations of innocence,

he proclaims that he has not made
anyone cry,

is not an eavesdropper,

and has not polluted the water.

But did Ani really live
such a perfect life?

Not quite, but that’s where
the heart scarab amulet comes in.

It’s inscribed with the words,
“Do not stand as a witness against me,”

precisely so Ani’s heart
doesn’t betray him

by recalling the time he listened
to his neighbors fight

or washed his feet in the Nile.

Now, it’s Ani’s moment of truth,
the weighing of the heart.

If his heart is heavier than the feather,
weighed down by Ani’s wrongdoings,

it’ll be devoured
by the monstrous Ammit,

part crocodile, part leopard,
part hippopotamus,

and Ani will cease to exist forever.

But Ani is in luck.

His heart is judged pure.

Ra, the sun god, takes him to Osiris,
god of the underworld,

who gives him final approval to enter
the afterlife.

In the endless and lush field of reeds,

Ani meets his deceased parents.

Here, there is no sadness, pain, or anger,
but there is work to be done.

Like everyone else, Ani must cultivate
a plot of land,

which he does with the help of a Shabti
doll that had been placed in his tomb.

Today, the Papyrus of Ani resides
in the British Museum,

where it has been since 1888.

Only Ani, if anyone, knows what really
happened after his death.

But thanks to his Book of the Dead,

we can imagine him happily tending
his crops for all eternity.