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The Afterlife

It is believed that there are 12 different Afterlives. There is a afterlife dedicated to each of the nine gods, as well as a Yeras, Dures and Radah.   When a person dies it is guided to the afterlife. The soul's actions and beliefs of their time in the material plane are judged, and a decision is made on where to send them. A combination of actions and beliefs are reviewed. (For example a great teacher who never prayed to Danu but spread a lot of genuine and good knowledge would be allowed into her afterlife, as would a devout monk of her word even if they didn't directly teach others).   If they are not deemed worthy of any one god the soul is sent to Yeras. It is a very neutral place. From here a soul can make the decision to start working towards getting into one of the god's afterlife. After certain amount of servitude and time dedicated to the god of their choice - enough to prove themselves worthy - they can progress into a specific god's afterlife, where they will be treated in the same way as someone who entered that god's afterlife from the beginning. Alternatively, the soul can choose to pass over while in Yeras and make the situation permanent - also preventing them from being resurrected. Yeras is not a painful or torturous resting place for the soul, however it is incredibly boring and can kind of drive the soul mad. The majority of people decide to complete servitude to go to a better afterlife.   Souls that denounce the gods once in Yeras or commit crimes against the gods are sent to Dures, as are explicitly evil souls from earth (such as liches). Dures is a torturous place of existence. Once being sent to Dures the soul cannot be retrieved to other places in the afterlife, although resurrection is still an option. Once again a soul can chose to pass over and forsake their chance of resurrection to live in Dures permanently although there is no reason to do this.  
When a soul is judged to be worthy for one of the gods, they are sent to that god's afterlife. While there they are expected to be servants of this god. Although they must perform servitude in some capacity, the majority of the time is spent enjoying the afterlife, only occasionally being called on to serve. Once that level of work for their god is complete they are provided with a couple of choices. They can either ascend into Radah: a place of eternal happiness where you get everything you could ever want, at the cost of surrendering the ability for you to be resurrected. The second option also involves surrendering their ability to be resurrected, this time in favour of actively becoming a celestial being (an angel, for example) - they'd continue to work for the god, but it would allow for frequent passing to and from the material plane. The third option is to remain in the singular god's afterlife, no longer in servitude. While a good place it does not provide eternal happiness the way Radah does.
Some examples of servitude the gods ask of someone's soul: followers of Dearil are expected to help guide souls from the material plane to the afterlife and process them to the correct place; followers of Aife are expected to protect the borders between the afterlives and followers of Njord are expected to keep the tide moving correctly.  
While there are reports of what each afterlife is like, due to resurrection magic, no one knows what the afterlife becomes once you sacrifice your ability to be resurrected. A lot of theories are thrown around about what Radah is like. There are two popular ones. The first is that it is like a combination of all of the god's personal afterlives, so that one may have the ability to walk between each section and spend time where they would like. It is believed that the gods themselves frequent this afterlife and that communication with them is not just possible but common. The other theory states that each person's Radah is different based on their preferences and what they would want from Radah. For example, a dedicated student's idea of Radah might be a regular school day where they always get 100% on their tests. In this theory the gods are less likely to visit however it is believed that souls who loved one another (whether platonic, romantic or familial) are able to spend eternity together.

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