A woman decorates a grave during the Qing Ming festival, also known as
Tomb Sweeping Day, at a cemetery in Shanghai on April 6, 2018. Source:
Johannes Eisele/AFP
WAILING cries and impassioned tears met bulldozers and angry officials
in the Chinese province of Jiangxi as a campaign to phase out burials
found a very real face.
Aiming to reduce the space needed for graveyards and to discourage
people from spending excessive amounts on ornate coffins, the Jiangxi
has been pushing burial reform. They are not the first to try this, with
the unusual exercise being touted across China.
Jiangxi, however, took a rather heavy-handed approach. Collecting all of
the coffins in the region, including those already bought and paid for,
the authorities set about destroying them. There were thousands in
total. Family members and the coffin’s planned future occupants were
devastated after having saved for years to afford the hand-crafted
caskets.
In video footage from the seizure, a woman is seen sobbing on the floor
and an elderly man climbs into his coffin, and having to be forcibly
removed by officials.
The authorities are pushing for people to favour cremation over the
traditional burial to reach a target of having all dead be cremated by
Sept 1. But the burial process is steeped in tradition in China and
convincing people to forego these rites can be difficult.
Authorities have been trying for decades to move people away from ground
burials as China’s population boomed to now 1.4 billion.
It is a tradition of some old people in China to save money when they are healthy to buy their own coffin. They even celebrate when they get it. It is believed that this brings longevity and happiness #hainan
As far back as the 50s, Chairman Mao Zedong was pushing the message that
traditional funeral traditions were a “feudal superstition.” But even
he opted for embalming upon his death.
Past campaigns to prevent ground burials have ended in tragedy,
highlighting the importance placed on traditions by China’s aged
population.
In 2014, officials in Anqing city in Anhui province ordered that all
those who die after June 1 must be cremated. This strict cut-off date
was thought to be behind a spate of suicides among the city’s elderly wanting to ensure they died before the new regulations came into force.
This is far from the only attempt to maximise space. In 2016,
governmental departments issued new guidelines for burials that included
spreading ashes at sea and even vertical burial.
A year earlier, the government even hosted a
cremation competition pitting 50 of the country’s top cremators against
one another in a challenge demonstrating their technical skills and
diligence.
While the overzealous local officials in Jiangxi have received a telling
off and been advised to handle future attempts with more consideration,
the practice isn’t going away.
During an event last month, Liu Qi, the provincial governor and
Communist Party secretary, said that burial reform would “break
1,000-year” customs and “benefit the nation, the people and future
generations,” according to a summary of his comments in The Jiangxi Daily, and reported by the New York Times.
He encouraged officials to “conscientiously implement the central
government’s requirements and closely focus on the goal of funerals that
benefit the people, are green and civilised.”