H.T.
V.,
I am so sorry for your loss. My parents just committed suicide before christmas. I have been doing a lot of research on this subject because my two year old son seems me "sad." Also, I want to know what is appropriate to tell both my sons about their grandparents when they are old enough to ask.
The concensus seems to be not to follow our first instinct and "sheild" the kids even at a young age. Suicide is something they can understand, and by lying to them about it, we are only increasing the stigma already placed on suicide. Young children also have the right to their grief.
I would suggest if your oldest daughter wants to go, she's processing the information and probably would appreciate the opportunity to do some of this emotional research on her own. Instinctively, adults will not share the "yucky" details with her. And anything she can't handle she won't process. I have met a lot of people now that have never said, "thank goodness my parents sheilded me from finding out." In fact, it's been the opposite.
The kids have the capacity to understand suicide, but also that it is wrong. In fact, they have a much better ability to draw those lines than adults because their thinking is much more black and white.
I would encourage you if not letting your daughter go if she wants, to at least tell her what happened and let her process it. That way, she can take that important journey from thinking about her uncle more than just in the manner that he died. If she's able to process that, she and everyone else can look past the suicide and remember the person.
I know it's hard and it's against everything we think we should be doing as parents at first glance. I revealed in my struggle with this, that I am doing my job by teaching my children how to deal with life situations, and that they don't have to just be happy all the time. It's important that they learn to deal with all their emotions, and not learn to stuff them and have issues later on. My son will catch me sometimes and say, "mama, sad." At first I would try to tell him no, I'm fine. But now I say,"Yes, Mamas sad sometimes and that's ok." His ability for empathy at this young age is astounding, but had I shielded him from it, he couldn't practice that skill.
You have all my compassion and respect during this hard time. Blessings!