The business organized around death constitutes an industry of notable magnitude. Beyond 'mundane' considerations, religion offers paradises in compensation to those who cannot face the realities of death and eternal oblivion. Throughout history, all religions have described what Zaleski calls journeys or 'otherworldly transits'. Now: is there a similar journey to be made? Wouldn't it be much more realistic to accept, as Othello already did, that with death we reach the end of the journey? In any case, where could he have gone? Where should Othello go? After all, and said in the succinct style of the author of the First Epistle of Saint John, 'No man has ever seen God.'