
Highgate Cemetery
In London, gravesite sharing has become an uncomfortable-yet-necessary-to discuss option. The Guardian summed it up the best when it reported:
“So you think London, population 8 million, is crowded with the living? There are many millions more under the soil of a city that has been inhabited for 2,000 years. And London is rapidly running out of places to put them. Now the city’s largest cemetery is trying to persuade Londoners to share a grave with a stranger. “
Will it work?
Perhaps, but there are mixed feelings in addition to the illegality of grave re-use to overcome. However, re-use is legal if the grave is 75 years or older AND located in the City of London.
Read the full article here.
Some may just say this only bolsters the rationale for cremation but what if this is not an option?
In contrast to London, only one of the 71 cemeteries in Moscow remains open for burials. The Russian Orthodox Church does not allow for cremation, making the search for a plot space all the more challenging.
Lack of space has given rise to a funeral plot black market. Last month, the New York Times reported that:
“With the fall of the Soviet Union, the government deregulated and privatized much of the funeral business in Russia. This has led to an explosion of private funeral agencies. Funerary agents largely operate free of oversight, and can easily take advantage of grieving families desperately seeking a burial plot.
The number of agents, licensed and not, exceed the number of people who die daily in Moscow.
The agents are often in cahoots with the police and hospital staff members, who tip them off when someone dies — for a fee, of course. They have been known to show up at the deceased’s residence before the ambulance, pressing and cajoling grieving relatives.”
Read the full article here.
And perhaps you saw coverage of a highrise that opened this week in Tokyo where several floors are devoted to the storage of cremated remains. Visitors can use what is essentially a dumb waiter to summon the remains and “tombstone” of the person they intend to honor, place their flowers, say their prayers, and then return the “grave” (for want of a better word) to storage. Certainly an interesting idea…
Hi Kristy: I missed that one, otherwise I would have added it in. Can you post a link?
Try these links to find the article on the Japanese Hi-tech graveyards:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/8302476.stm
OR
http://www.pri.org/world/asia/japan-high-tech-graveyard-in-sky1680.html
Thanks for sharing these. .