What's new

Cremation instead of burial for Muslims?

KingKhanWC

World Star
Joined
Jan 2, 2010
Runs
50,860
Uk government have issued a provision due to the current virus outbreak.

If there is insufficient capacity in an area, the body maybe cremated even if it is against the wishes of the deceased or their loved ones.

I cant imagine going to a Muslim funeral where someone is cremated.

I think this will be allowed in Islam but does anyone know if there are some historic examples of this in Islamic history or if there is a ruling on this?
 
Had the same msg vis whatsapp...don’t know how true this is.
 
Cremation is STRICTLY forbidden

In the olden times, in a muslim majority areas, even the non-muslims were buried and not cremated.
 
Cremation is STRICTLY forbidden

In the olden times, in a muslim majority areas, even the non-muslims were buried and not cremated.


Problem is you will have no choice here in the UK, graveyards will be overflowing. This is a government directive.

Would it be possible to send the body to Pakistan or another Muslim country?
 
Problem is you will have no choice here in the UK, graveyards will be overflowing. This is a government directive.

Would it be possible to send the body to Pakistan or another Muslim country?

Most pakistanis send the bodies to Pakistan anyways
 
Hopefully this will not be an issue in Canada as Canada is pretty large by area. We also have a relatively small population here.
 
Most pakistanis send the bodies to Pakistan anyways

I know this. Im asking will they still continue to allow bodies in while they have restrictions in place?

Where's the link to this news? Anything via a credible source?

It's new legislation which will be voted in on Tuesday.

This is from a source who works with the government.

"Paragraph 27 Summary of provisions says:

- If there is insufficient capacity in an area, then *a body may be cremated contrary to the deceased’s wishes*"
 
Where's the link to this news? Anything via a credible source?

Here

442 Personal choice for body disposal will be respected as far as possible, however, only where there is no suitable alternative (for example if safe storage limits were likely to be breached and out of area alternatives were not available), the power to direct may be used to direct whether a body is buried or cremated.In this respect it has been necessary to disapply section 46(3) of the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984 which prohibits cremation against the wishes of the deceased. Similarprovisions are disapplied in Northern Ireland.

https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/bills/cbill/58-01/0122/en/20122en.pdf
 
Please dont send it to Pakistan. Follow the directives of the country you live in for once. We already have our own messes to deal with.
 
Please dont send it to Pakistan. Follow the directives of the country you live in for once. We already have our own messes to deal with.

I do understand the concern.

How would pakistanis feel when a body, probably infected with virus or alien micro organism comes to pakistan in order to burry (a circumstance for which pakistan may not be ready for it)?

I somewhere watched a video of a muslim scholar who was saying that, while maintaining the religious guidelines, one has to also keep consideration about the affect that it might have on others. You may have noble intentions but if the consequence is devastating for others, then you should forbid yourself from doing it.

That did make sense.
 
I do understand the concern.

How would pakistanis feel when a body, probably infected with virus or alien micro organism comes to pakistan in order to burry (a circumstance for which pakistan may not be ready for it)?

I somewhere watched a video of a muslim scholar who was saying that, while maintaining the religious guidelines, one has to also keep consideration about the affect that it might have on others. You may have noble intentions but if the consequence is devastating for others, then you should forbid yourself from doing it.

That did make sense.

Exactly, this disease is so fatal sadly that even the dead bodies have to be washed with calcium oxide before burrying them. You cannot bury the body with traditional islamic rites. Tragic.
 
Funerals.jpg

Great work by British Muslims and other faith groups. None have to worry about their loved ones getting cremated now.
 
UK to give religious exemptions for cremation during coronavirus pandemic

The UK government has agreed to amend legislation that may have allowed state authorities to use cremation even against the express wishes of the deceased and their families.

Jewish and Muslim groups had expressed deep concern about such legislation since it would contravene deeply held religious beliefs and practices, and an amendment was advanced by Muslim MP Naz Shah.

Cremation is strongly prohibited by Jewish law and is extremely taboo in Jewish society.

Following a political and public campaign against the proposed legislation, the government adopted its own amendment on the issue, accepting the need to adhere to the specific wishes of different faiths regarding cremation.

The terms of the initial draft UK bill were part of a larger piece of legislation aimed at tackling the public health emergency caused by the coronavirus pandemic in the country, with the clauses on disposal of the dead laid out with the expectation that the number of deaths will increase significantly.

Under the section dealing with state authority in relation to transportation, storage and disposal of dead bodies, the legislation stated that “Personal choice for body disposal will be respected as far as possible.”

It stated, however, that “where there is no suitable alternative (for example if safe storage limits were likely to be breached and out of area alternatives were not available), the power to direct may be used to direct whether a body is buried or cremated.”

The bill noted that this clause would need to “disapply” a section of earlier legislation which specifically prohibits cremation against the wishes of the deceased.

Following publication of the draft bill, Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl called on the government to respect religious traditions on cremation and burial.

"For those that do succumb to this pandemic, it is important that they know that they will be laid to rest in accordance with their wishes,” she said, noting that two members of the Jewish community died over the weekend from coronavirus.

After the decision was made to adopt an amendment to the bill, van der Zyl said that the Board of Deputies "would like to extend our deep and sincere thanks to the Government for working with us to amend this legislation, to protect the final wishes and religious freedoms of the deceased. There could be few things more sacred.”

Van der Zyl specifically thanked Shah for her work, as well as Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick.

Shah took to her Facebook page on Sunday to welcome the amendment, saying she was “relieved that the Government has listened to what we've said about religious burials for Muslim and Jewish people.”

https://www.jpost.com/International...e-cremated-due-to-coronavirus-pandemic-621997
 
I am glad that the UK government has changed their mind and they are respecting the beliefs of Muslims and Jews.
 
UK to give religious exemptions for cremation during coronavirus pandemic

The UK government has agreed to amend legislation that may have allowed state authorities to use cremation even against the express wishes of the deceased and their families.

Jewish and Muslim groups had expressed deep concern about such legislation since it would contravene deeply held religious beliefs and practices, and an amendment was advanced by Muslim MP Naz Shah.

Cremation is strongly prohibited by Jewish law and is extremely taboo in Jewish society.

Following a political and public campaign against the proposed legislation, the government adopted its own amendment on the issue, accepting the need to adhere to the specific wishes of different faiths regarding cremation.

The terms of the initial draft UK bill were part of a larger piece of legislation aimed at tackling the public health emergency caused by the coronavirus pandemic in the country, with the clauses on disposal of the dead laid out with the expectation that the number of deaths will increase significantly.

Under the section dealing with state authority in relation to transportation, storage and disposal of dead bodies, the legislation stated that “Personal choice for body disposal will be respected as far as possible.”

It stated, however, that “where there is no suitable alternative (for example if safe storage limits were likely to be breached and out of area alternatives were not available), the power to direct may be used to direct whether a body is buried or cremated.”

The bill noted that this clause would need to “disapply” a section of earlier legislation which specifically prohibits cremation against the wishes of the deceased.

Following publication of the draft bill, Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl called on the government to respect religious traditions on cremation and burial.

"For those that do succumb to this pandemic, it is important that they know that they will be laid to rest in accordance with their wishes,” she said, noting that two members of the Jewish community died over the weekend from coronavirus.

After the decision was made to adopt an amendment to the bill, van der Zyl said that the Board of Deputies "would like to extend our deep and sincere thanks to the Government for working with us to amend this legislation, to protect the final wishes and religious freedoms of the deceased. There could be few things more sacred.”

Van der Zyl specifically thanked Shah for her work, as well as Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick.

Shah took to her Facebook page on Sunday to welcome the amendment, saying she was “relieved that the Government has listened to what we've said about religious burials for Muslim and Jewish people.”

https://www.jpost.com/International...e-cremated-due-to-coronavirus-pandemic-621997

Cremation should also be strongly prohibited by Christian law as well. Why it was not mentioned?
 
Cremation should also be strongly prohibited by Christian law as well. Why it was not mentioned?

There are not that many practicing Christians left in the UK, Xmas and Easter eggs dont count.
 
Jewish lobby coming to rescue of British muslims
 
Jewish lobby coming to rescue of British muslims

"amendment was advanced by Muslim MP Naz Shah." She is a Pakistani British Muslim who did all the hard pushing. But if it makes you feel better, Jews did it.
 
I do hope, there wont be any repercussions for this.

On one hand, you have religious beliefs.

On the other hand, you are fighting with an enemy the charecteristics of which, is largely unknown.
 
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times
 
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times

We had a death in our area and the janaza took place last week.The death was from the virus. The number of people was limited to 5 people.
 
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times

What type of rule is that?
India haven't even been affected that bad as of yet.
Sanghis at work
 
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times

Not in the UK , all that's been ammended is minimal people at the burial sight within the normal islamic way
 
Last edited:
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times

This is a disgrace. The UK has little room and may be overwhelmed but still has decided to respect the wishes of Muslims,Christians and Jews.

RSS/BJP are extremists who are using this to abuse Muslim and others rights.

Muslims need to stand up to this in India, but wont.
 
So three of the doctors who have died treating Coronavirus patients are Muslims - might even be the first three, I'm not sure - does that mean they will get cremated against their family wishes as recompense for putting their lives on the line for the British people?
 
Why will burial be not allowed in India? They are burying bodies in other countries.

Would love to see the reason.
 
So three of the doctors who have died treating Coronavirus patients are Muslims - might even be the first three, I'm not sure - does that mean they will get cremated against their family wishes as recompense for putting their lives on the line for the British people?

No, in the UK we have changed the policy to burials only as per wishes of the deceased or family. This news added to thread is from India ,who want to cremate everyone inc Muslims! Surely an RSS ploy.
 
No, in the UK we have changed the policy to burials only as per wishes of the deceased or family. This news added to thread is from India ,who want to cremate everyone inc Muslims! Surely an RSS ploy.

Ok, that's a relief. It did not seem like a very British thing to do, glad that common sense prevailed.

As for India....well just need to look at who is their representative govt. Can't say there are any surprises there.
 
Ok, that's a relief. It did not seem like a very British thing to do, glad that common sense prevailed.

As for India....well just need to look at who is their representative govt. Can't say there are any surprises there.

I would like to hear the thoughts of Indian Muslims on here. I have a feeling they will just agree to this without any resistance.

@kayaal
 
Thankfully there will be no cremation, if you even look at this beyond religion I couldn't imagine visiting the grave of a loved one which is full of ashes, gives you a sick feeling in the stomach especially in a time like this which isn't easy for us who have elders that have health concerns, you don't even want to think about this. It's shocking that people would agree to burning their own family.
 
Thankfully there will be no cremation, if you even look at this beyond religion I couldn't imagine visiting the grave of a loved one which is full of ashes, gives you a sick feeling in the stomach especially in a time like this which isn't easy for us who have elders that have health concerns, you don't even want to think about this. It's shocking that people would agree to burning their own family.

Hope you're well bro.

Do they still have a grave? I have little knowledge on cremation. I know some people take the ashes of their dead ones and keep them in a vase at home, find this strange too tbh.
 
All bodies of coronavirus patients to be cremated: BMC

"All bodies of coronavirus patients should be cremated irrespective of religion. Burial will not be allowed. The funeral should not involve more than 5 people," says Praveen Pardeshi, Commissioner of Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC).

Source Hindustan Times

BMC Withdraws Order to Cremate Bodies of Those Who Died of COVID-19 'Irrespective of Religion'

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ne...ovid-19-irrespective-of-religion-2557651.html
 
Thankfully there will be no cremation, if you even look at this beyond religion I couldn't imagine visiting the grave of a loved one which is full of ashes, gives you a sick feeling in the stomach especially in a time like this which isn't easy for us who have elders that have health concerns, you don't even want to think about this. It's shocking that people would agree to burning their own family.

There won't be any grave yards, now they are using cremation furnace, whole body will turn into ashes within hours, Furnace can be used for multiple cremations in a day
 
Hope you're well bro.

Do they still have a grave? I have little knowledge on cremation. I know some people take the ashes of their dead ones and keep them in a vase at home, find this strange too tbh.

That's a good point am not sure but the general consensus seems to be they keep it in their homes the ashes or depending on view drop them in one of the rivers as a holy ritual.
 
<iframe src="https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fmuftimenk%2Fvideos%2F221121055765399%2F&show_text=1&width=560" width="560" height="439" style="border:none;overflow:hidden" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" allowTransparency="true" allow="encrypted-media" allowFullScreen="true"></iframe>

Scholar: Mufti Menk.
 
Last edited:
Anguish as Sri Lanka forces Muslims to cremate COVID-19 victims

Rights group and activists accuse gov't of forcing cremation of Muslim COVID-19 victims in disregard to WHO guidelines.

The forced cremation of two COVID-19 infected Muslims in Sri Lanka has sent shock waves among the minority community, which accused the authorities of violating Islamic burial rites.

Bishrul Hafi Mohammed Joonus, a 73-year- old man from the capital Colombo who died of COVID-19, was the second Muslim to have been cremated in the Indian Ocean island nation, which has registered 151 cases so far.

Bishrul's son Fayaz Joonus, 46, said his father who had a kidney disorder tested positive for the virus about two weeks ago. He died on April 1 and was cremated the following day.

Fayaz said they could not perform congregational funeral prayers, called the Janazah, for his father due to fear of infections.

"My father was taken in a vehicle under the supervision of the police force and was cremated. We did some prayers outside the morgue, but it was not a Janazah that us Muslim typically do," Fayaz told Al Jazeera.

"The government needs to make arrangements for us Muslims to be able to bury our loved ones in accordance with our Islamic burial rites."

"If there is an option of burial, our government should accommodate. Cremation is not the only option, we want to bury our loved ones as per the Islamic way," he told Al Jazeera.

Sri Lanka's Ministry of Health on Tuesday issued COVID-19 guidelines saying the standard procedure of disposing bodies should be cremation. It reversed an earlier guideline that allowed traditional Muslim burial.

It also said the body should not be washed and placed in a sealed bag and a coffin, as against the Islamic practice of washing the body.
Amnesty calls on authorities to stop forced cremation

Muslim leaders and activists have pointed out that the World Health Organization (WHO) allows both burial or cremation for people dying due to the pandemic.

Prominent lawyer Ali Sabry said in a Facebook post that he was disappointed with authorities' decision to cremate bodies of Muslims, as it was in disregard to the WHO guidelines, which say that a body can be either buried or cremated.

Out of the four people who died due to COVID-19, two were Muslims. The cremation of Muslims has caused anguish in the community.

"The Muslim community sees this as a racist agenda of extremist Buddhist forces that seem to hold the government to ransom," Hilmy Ahamed, vice president of Muslim Council of Sri Lanka, told Al Jazeera.

"The guidelines issued by the WHO is practised by Britain, most of the European countries, Singapore, Hong Kong and all the Muslim nations [except for Sri Lanka]," he told Al Jazeera.

Amnesty International has also called on authorities to "respect the right of religious minorities to carry out the final rites" according to their own traditions.

"At this difficult time, the authorities should be bringing communities together and not deepening divisions between them," Biraj Patnaik, South Asia director at Amnesty International, said in a statement.

"Grieving relatives of people who have died because of COVID-19 should be able to bid farewell to their loved ones in the way that they wish, especially where this is permissible under international guidelines."

Muslims account for 10 percent of Sri Lanka's 21 million population. But their relationship with the majority Sinhala Buddhists deteriorated in the years after the end of civil war in 2009 during which hardline Buddhist groups were blamed for several attacks against Muslims' businesses and places of worship.

Following the deadly attacks in April 2019 that killed more than 250 people, Muslims have faced increased hostility from the Sinhala majority.

A little-known Muslim organisation was blamed for the island nation's worst attack since the civil war fought between the government forces and the Tamil separatist fighters.

"This is just to hurt the feelings of the minority," Azath Salley, leader of the National Unity Alliance political party and the former governor of Western province, told Al Jazeera.
'Anti-Islamic sentiments'

The method of the disposal of the body has become a big talking point in the country, with a section of the media accused of running "anti-Muslim hysteria" and pointing fingers at Muslims for the spread of the virus.

Nalaka Gunawadenne, a media analyst said amid the COVID-19 pandemic, it is very disturbing and disheartening to see anti-Islamic sentiments and anti-Muslim hate speech "raise their ugly head again in Sri Lanka".

“This is national and global emergency shared by all humans, and not a time highlighting our cultural divisions.

The coronavirus does not care about our ethnic or religious differences. We need to fear the virus - not each other - and unite in containing and battling the disease." he told Al Jazeera.

Government officials from the health services department did not respond to repeated calls from Al Jazeera for comment.

Meanwhile, Fayaz, who is in a makeshift quarantine centers in Punani in the eastern province, said he did not inform his mother of his father's death and cremation.

"She has heart disease and we don't want to risk it. She won't be able to bear it."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...-top-240000-live-updates-200402230546497.html
 
Am joining a funeral for a Muslim via Zoom today.
 
Cremation should also be strongly prohibited by Christian law as well. Why it was not mentioned?

It is not encouraged nor forbidden. Scripture says Saul and Jonathan were cremated because their bodies had been mutilated. But some literalist Christians think that burning will present the bodily Resurrection promised.

My strongly Christian Mother expressed a wish for cremation, and we laid her remains in the grave with my father’s.

I would prefer natural burial. Wind me in a sheet, drop me in a hole in a meadow somewhere and I will feed a tree.
 
Am joining a funeral for a Muslim via Zoom today.

How did it make you feel [MENTION=93712]MenInG[/MENTION]? Of course it is painful but in terms or via Zoom for the first time?

May Allah reward the deceased with Jannah.
 
It is not encouraged nor forbidden. Scripture says Saul and Jonathan were cremated because their bodies had been mutilated. But some literalist Christians think that burning will present the bodily Resurrection promised.

My strongly Christian Mother expressed a wish for cremation, and we laid her remains in the grave with my father’s.

I would prefer natural burial. Wind me in a sheet, drop me in a hole in a meadow somewhere and I will feed a tree.

This is the reason for burial in Islam. Nothing goes to waste if it can help sustain more life.
 
How did it make you feel [MENTION=93712]MenInG[/MENTION]? Of course it is painful but in terms or via Zoom for the first time?

May Allah reward the deceased with Jannah.

Was a strange experience.

Here is a video that is being circulated of recent burials:


Mass burial in South London, 10th April 2020: This is probably the first time any of us have witnessed a burial of this scale (10 deceased) in the Muslim, let alone other, communities in London or the entire UK. The imam explains the procedure and how it will be done in accordance with the Muslim faith. All are covid-19 related deaths. Heartbreaking...

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 50%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/9j9mf4/vgkkvz" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>
 
Was a strange experience.

Here is a video that is being circulated of recent burials:


Mass burial in South London, 10th April 2020: This is probably the first time any of us have witnessed a burial of this scale (10 deceased) in the Muslim, let alone other, communities in London or the entire UK. The imam explains the procedure and how it will be done in accordance with the Muslim faith. All are covid-19 related deaths. Heartbreaking...

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 50%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/9j9mf4/vgkkvz" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>

Very depressing.

This is the first time I am seeing something like this.
 
Sri Lanka makes cremations compulsory for coronavirus deaths

Sri Lanka has made cremations compulsory for coronavirus victims, ignoring protests from the country's Muslim population which says the rule goes against Islamic tradition.

Three Muslims are among the seven people who have so far died from the infectious disease in the country. Their bodies were cremated by the authorities despite protests from relatives.

"The corpse of a person who has died or is suspected to have died, of ... COVID-19 shall be cremated," Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi said on Sunday.

The decision has also been criticised by rights groups.

"At this difficult time, the authorities should be bringing communities together and not deepening divisions," Amnesty's South Asia Director Biraj Patnaik said earlier this month.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said people dying from coronavirus "can be buried or cremated".

More than 200 people have tested positive for coronavirus so far in Sri Lanka, where an indefinite, nationwide curfew has been imposed.

The country's main political party that represents Muslims, which make up 10 percent of the 21 million-strong national population, has accused the government of "callous disregard" for religious rituals and the families' wishes.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...lsory-coronavirus-deaths-200412135710164.html
 
This is completely unacceptable.

Muslims must be given the right to bury their dead as per their religion. If needed bodies can be sent to Islamic nations or home country of the diseased immigrant. All you need this be more careful but denying burial right to people is criminal injustice.
 
Was a strange experience.

Here is a video that is being circulated of recent burials:


Mass burial in South London, 10th April 2020: This is probably the first time any of us have witnessed a burial of this scale (10 deceased) in the Muslim, let alone other, communities in London or the entire UK. The imam explains the procedure and how it will be done in accordance with the Muslim faith. All are covid-19 related deaths. Heartbreaking...

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 50%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/s/9j9mf4/vgkkvz" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>

Emotional times for all inc us Muslims.

Thanks to the Lord, we here in the UK and most Muslims can still bury their loved ones. I cant imagine knowing someone I love is cremeated even though Allah will of course understand.

May Almighty Allah keep you and your family in good health.
 
With bodies piling up at hospitals and morgues, and funeral homes turning families away due to a lack of capacity, New York City has been stretched to its limits by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The crisis has touched thousands of grieving families, virtually all of which have been forced to navigate chaos after their loved one's death from the deadly respiratory virus.

The funeral process can be even more complicated for Muslim New Yorkers, who make up about three percent of the population across the city's five boroughs, because a series of religious practices guides the burials.

"It's overwhelming - just the amount of illness, the amount of deaths," said Imam Khalid Latif, executive director of the Islamic Center at New York University (NYU), about the general feeling in the city.

He said that early on, it became clear that "funerals and things happening at end of life were likely really difficult for a lot of people" in the Muslim community.

"A lot of people [were] reaching out saying, 'We just can't connect to anybody, and the places we are connecting to, they're telling us it's going to be days before anything can actually happen'."

Rising costs

Latif said families have also raised concerns about the cost of burials.

An Islamic funeral service in New York City would typically cost around $2,000, including a plot of land for burial, Latif said, but these days, some members of the Muslim community said they were being charged around $10,000.

"In Islam, the funeral rites are considered a communal obligation," he told Al Jazeera. "Here, we have a responsibility to ensure that people who can't afford it are still able to have it done."

Latif helped set up an online fundraiser that collected nearly $195,000 this month to support Muslim Funeral Services of New York, a Brooklyn-based group also known as the Janazah Project.

The money will be dispensed to funeral homes to bolster their services - including the purchase of vehicles and refrigerated trucks to transport and store bodies when hospitals are over-capacity, and personal protective equipment for workers.

Latif said financial strain should not be a reason people do not get a chance to properly remember their loved ones, so needy families will also directly receive some of the money to cover funeral costs.

"To me, that's a really unfortunate reason as to why someone who is already in a lot of emotional strife will have added anxiety that doesn't allow for them to grieve," he said.

Shifting practices

Financial concerns are especially prevalent among people employed in public-facing industries - such as taxi or Uber drivers, restaurant staff, or construction workers - who have taken a hit during the pandemic.

Muslim New Yorkers make up a high percentage of those workers in the city, said Ahmed Mohamed, litigation director at the Council on American-Islamic Relations New York chapter (CAIR-NY).

"Especially for immigrant communities, telework, work from home, is not a possibility. Having to be confined to your home means you don't have a job and you don't have a paycheque," Mohamed said.

He said many traditional Muslim practices have been upended during the COVID-19 crisis: families cannot be with a sick loved-one because the illness is so contagious and most hospitals have strict visitation rules in place, and public gatherings have been restricted, too. The challenges also come as Muslims worldwide prepare for the start of the holy month of Ramadan.

In New York state, funeral homes and cemeteries have been designated as essential services, but the government urged them to avoid in-person gatherings. "If in-person services must be held, the gathering should be limited to only immediate family, with as few persons physically present as possible," the state said in a letter to funeral directors on April 10.

As a result, the Muslim community - like other religious groups across the United States - has had to adapt to meet public health recommendations designed to reduce the potential spread of the coronavirus.

Mosques have shuttered their doors, and Friday afternoon prayers - as well as other practices, such as halaqa (communal religious gatherings) and khotba (the sermon before Friday prayer) - are taking place online instead. Some families are live-streaming funerals, as well.

"Obviously, it's not what the Muslim community would do during a normal basis, where we come together to better relieve some pain and ease people's sorrows during those times," Mohamed told Al Jazeera.

Unfounded rumours

Despite those stop-gap measures, uncertainty around burials remains a source of concern.

A rumour that Muslims were being buried in mass graves recently ripped through the community, said Raja Abdulhaq, executive director of Majlis Ash-Shura Islamic Leadership Council of New York, an umbrella group for over 90 mosques and organisations.

"We had imams calling us where their community members are calling them crying, worrying about their loved ones being buried in mass graves without seeing them. This was really scary for the whole community," Abdulhaq said.

The group reached out to city officials and investigated the claim, and found the rumour to be untrue, he told Al Jazeera.

"What's happening is that hospitals are creating temporary morgues remotely, away from the hospitals, so they can continue to have enough capacity for the new bodies that are coming in," he said. "But this is very specific only to unclaimed bodies."

In a news conference on April 9, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said each body "will be treated individually and specifically" and burial plans will be coordinated with the families of the deceased.

"We clearly have painful but real contingency plans to deal with anything that might come up ahead, but with a very clear standard: dignity for the families. Every family is treated individually," he said.

Another rumour that Muslim bodies were being cremated - a practice that is forbidden in Islam - was also false, Abdulhaq said. "So far we have no cases and we have no reason to believe that this is happening."

"While the exact number of Muslims who have died from COVID-19 is unavailable, Abdulhaq said the city's Bengali community was hit particularly hard.

'Unprecedented time'
In Islam, the body of a deceased person is washed and shrouded, a prayer is performed, and then the body is buried directly into the ground without any embalming, explained Latif, the NYU imam.

But he said that in exceptional circumstances, such as during today's COVID-19 pandemic, when some of those religious practices cannot take place for whatever reason, alternatives are possible.

"An individual will essentially tap their hands on clean dirt or earth, and positions their hands then on different parts of the deceased's body as a purification process in lieu of the washing," Latif said, by way of example. That process is known as tayammum.

Latif acknowledged that many community members are still struggling with what to do when a loved one passes away, or when people get sick with COVID-19.

"It's really hard for people right now who are losing loved ones because there's so much happening that prevents them from being there with them."

He encouraged people to reach out to one another to stave off isolation - especially in New York City, a place that he said can be particularly lonely. "It's an unprecedented time," Latif said. "And where government has failed and has not done its part, we just need to step up and do what we can and come together."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...hold-traditional-burials-200414163419702.html
 
This is the reason for burial in Islam. Nothing goes to waste if it can help sustain more life.

But if ashes are scattered, plants can still live off the potash and so on.

Burial is going to become more and more expensive as sites run out of space. There are so many of us now - the population of the Earth has more than doubled since 1970. I foresee a time when only rich families will be able to afford to bury their dead.
 
Government to publish guidance on funerals

Jenrick says he is asking councils to reopen cemeteries and graveyards so people can "seek solace" at the graves of those they loved, or lay flowers. "There are times in my life when I have needed to do that", he says, adding that small mercies can make a difference.

Jenrick also cites a case where mourners were turned away and says, "funerals can go ahead with close family present".
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A Muslim man in protective gear offers funeral prayers for a policeman who died from COVID-19 before his burial at a graveyard in New Delhi. <br><br>The country of 1.3 billion people is under intense scrutiny over how it is managing to limit the pandemic's rampage<br><br>&#55357;&#56568; Sajjad Hussain <a href="https://t.co/z3Afm4rVYx">pic.twitter.com/z3Afm4rVYx</a></p>— AFP news agency (@AFP) <a href="https://twitter.com/AFP/status/1256070711770116097?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 1, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Senegal’s Supreme Court has upheld a ban on repatriating the bodies of citizens living abroad who have died of coronavirus, rejecting a plea from their distraught relatives.

A group of families with dead relatives abroad had sought to overturn the ban on the grounds that it violated their right to mourn and practise religion in the Muslim-majority West African country.

Senegal’s government had ruled out bringing back the bodies to stem the spread of the virus.

Family members have said that around 80 Senegalese have died from Covid-19 overseas, including 40 in France alone.

On Thursday, their lawyers said that the Supreme Court’s decision had caused deep distress.

They had argued during the proceedings that the health risk of bringing back bodies was “non-existent,” and that the ban infringed religious rights.
 
SOWETO, South Africa (Reuters) - Maaki Modimola sways along to a hymn in the yard of her dead sister’s home in the South African township of Soweto, a bottle of sanitiser swinging in her hand.

Later at the cemetery, mourners sit on chairs spaced one metre apart. The usual choir is replaced by a recorded track blaring out of a single speaker. Maaki’s sister Mary did not die from COVID-19, but its influence is everywhere in the ceremony.

Township funerals are usually much more extravagant affairs. But, like grieving families across South Africa and beyond, Maaki and her relatives had to scale back their plans and forgo some cherished traditions to comply with coronavirus restrictions.

Vigils before interment have been banned. Funerals are limited to 50 mourners - still more than the 20 allowed in Nigeria or the 15 in Kenya.

Maaki had wanted to help prepare Mary’s body, but the funeral director said that was not possible.

“I would have loved to ... make her beautiful, put make-up on her face, doll her up the way she liked, “ Maaki said after the service.

The infection has now spread across the continent, overturning a myriad of traditions and social norms in its wake.

More than 3,500 miles (5,500 km) away from Soweto in Cameroon’s commercial capital Douala, Constantin Size’s uncle died from a COVID-19 related condition, and was buried the same day without full ceremony.

In any other time, Samuel Wambe - a village noble, businessman and football manager - would have been taken back to his village, Size said.

In most regions of Cameroon, people usually gather for funeral events that can last days, even weeks. But the transportation of corpses and big burial ceremonies have been banned, and people are interred quickly.

“My uncle belonged to the class of nobles called ‘Suinfo’ (friend of the king). Only the initiated are allowed to attend his burial, with rituals aimed to accompany his soul to the creator,” Size said.

“It is absolutely necessary to do these rituals, if not it will have repercussions on the family lineage.”

It is a delicate balance for authorities: dealing with the pandemic, while respecting customs over the treatment of the dead.

Last month the county governor of western Kenya’s Siaya County, Cornel Rasanga, apologised after a video was posted online showing health ministry personnel in white protective gear dropping a body into a shallow grave in the dark as relatives wailed.

Back in South Africa, some in the Zulu culture believe proper custom needs to be followed or spirits will not rest.

“The spirit of the deceased will come back to haunt the living - that’s the belief, that their spirit will wander because they didn’t have that respect and that dignity during the process,” said Professor Sihawukele Ngubane who teaches at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

Miles away in Soweto, the scaled-back funeral is proceeding as planned.

Some mourners wear face masks and carry white flowers. At one point, a woman reaches across the gap between the chairs to rest her hand on the shoulder of another mourner.

Similar scenes are playing out at most funerals, says Lawrence Konyana, president of the National Funeral Directors Association.

Families are paying for the basics but the big marquees and catering have been cut back, he says. Supplies of flowers have dried up as markets shut down during lockdowns.

Monageng Legue, chief executive at Sopema Funerals which organised Mary Modimola’s service, said he had seen an around 30% fall in revenues as families cut extras like a cow for slaughter.

“I am a bit saddened, that her life wasn’t celebrated by the people who knew her, some who were close to her,” Maaki Modimola said after the funeral. “But I think she is happy, wherever she is.”

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...part-as-covid-19-curbs-funerals-idUSKBN22K0RJ
 
The Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka had originally agreed on burials of the coronavirus victims, but amended the guidelines on April 11 making their cremations mandatory.

Prominent Muslim activists and personalities have expressed their concerns against the ban on burials which they see as part of anti-Muslim rhetoric amid the pandemic.
 
The grief-stricken family of Zubair Fathima Rinosa in Sri Lanka's capital Colombo is demanding justice and explanation after tests, released two days after her body had been cremated, showed that the 44-year-old Muslim woman did not die from COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus.

Mohammed Sajid, one of Rinosa's four sons, said his mother was cremated on May 5 as part of Sri Lanka's controversial policy of mandatory cremation of all coronavirus victims in violation of traditional Islamic funeral practices.

He says his brother signed a consent form for cremation under duress from authorities.

However, two days later, Rinosa's test results showed she did not die of coronavirus. "On May 7, we learned through a media release that there had been an error in the initial testing of my mother for the virus. She did not die of COVID-19," he said.

Sajid said his father cried "painfully" after it emerged that his mother was "wrongfully" cremated.

"My father was crying nonstop. He kept saying: 'I can accept someday that she is gone, but not that she was cremated.'"

'Against basic religious right'

Four of the nine who have died from the disease were Muslims. All of them were cremated, which goes against the Islamic tradition of burying the dead.

The family is grieving. Not only have they lost her, but they have also been deprived of the basic religious right of burial.
ALI ZAHIR MOULANA, A FORMER SRI LANKA MUSLIM CONGRESS MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT

The Buddhist-majority South Asian island nation originally agreed on burials but amended the guidelines on April 11 making cremations of COVID-19 victims mandatory - a step Muslims say deprives them of their basic religious right.

"The family is grieving. Not only have they lost her, but they have also been deprived of the basic religious right of burial. They were also treated very badly by the authorities," Ali Zahir Moulana, former Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) member of parliament, told Al Jazeera.

"We urge the authorities to take all relevant precautionary measures in a way that does not dehumanise individuals."

The island nation's top Ulama body urged the government to allow the burial.

"We wish to reiterate that the Muslim community stand on this matter has always been that a Muslim deceased due to COVID-19 should have the option of being buried, in line with the WHO guidelines and as implemented in more than 180 countries, since it is an integral part of our faith and a religious obligation of the community towards the deceased," All Ceylon Jamiyyathul Ulama said in a statement.

Prominent Muslim activists and personalities have expressed their concerns against the ban on burials which they see as part of anti-Muslim rhetoric amid the pandemic.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa's counsel, Ali Sabry, said the government's cremation order was in disregard to guidelines by the World Health Organization (WHO).

"If the decision-makers, having considered all facts and aspects and have reached a decision based on scientific, medical or logical concerns, I have no issues with it and people must comply with it," he told Al Jazeera.

'Ethnic and religious bias'

Buddhist nationalists and section of media have blamed Muslims, who form nearly 10 percent of the population, for the spread of the virus that has, worldwide, killed more than 280,000 people and infected at least four million people.

This is part of their racist agenda, where they are telling the rest of the country that 'we will teach the Muslims a lesson'.
HILMY AHAMED, VICE PRESIDENT OF MUSLIM COUNCIL OF SRI LANKA

Sabry said it was unfortunate to find racism rearing its ugly head every time Sri Lanka is faced with a crisis. "Unfortunately, during the last few weeks, there has been quite a lot of hate speech directed at Muslims," said Sabri, who was nominated to Parliament from the governing Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) party.

Hilmy Ahamed, vice president of the Muslim Council of Sri Lanka, told Al Jazeera "extremist Buddhist forces" are using their influence in the government "to punish the Muslim community".

"This is part of their racist agenda, where they are telling the rest of the country that 'we will teach the Muslims a lesson'.

"There is widespread belief that Muslims did not vote for the current government so [what is happening now to Muslims] is political revenge."

In a letter to the inspector general of police, organisations, including the Muslim Council of Sri Lanka and the Colombo District Mosques' Federation, said social media posts and audio recordings deemed hate speech were circulating, the Hindu newspaper reported last month.

The letter, dated April 12, said videos circulating on social media spread messages urging people to refrain from buying goods from Muslim-run businesses.

Muslims have faced increased attacks from Buddhist hardliners following the end of the civil war between Tamil separatists and government forces in 2009.

Businesses owned by the minority community have come under attack multiple times over the last 10 years. The island nation of 21 million withdrew the Muslim halal system of certifying foods in 2013 after campaigns by Buddhist nationalists.

Following the deadly attacks on Easter Sunday last April, relations between the majority Sinhala Buddhists and Muslims have deteriorated further.

Sajith Premadasa, who was the runner-up in the November presidential elections, also expressed his concerns at the "religious bias".

"Every human being has to be treated equal. If we cannot uphold such moral and ethical values that are essential to a humane society, we are a failed state due to racism, inherent ethnic and religious bias, and marginalisation," Premadasa posted on Twitter.

'Stigmatisation' of Muslims

Rights groups such as Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Amnesty International and other international bodies have also spoken out against the "stigmatisation" of Muslims.

"[The government's position on mandatory cremation] has been criticised by four United Nations special rapporteurs as a violation of freedom of religion. The special rapporteurs noted that Sri Lankan Muslims have been stigmatised and targeted with hate speech during the coronavirus pandemic," Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at HRW, said in a report released late last month.

"The threat that the coronavirus poses to all Sri Lankans provides the government with an opportunity to improve communal relations in the country," Ganguly said.

"To promote public safety, it's important for the authorities to be seen as acting against discrimination, not promoting it."

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which is the second-largest inter-governmental organisation after the UN, expressed concerns over the reports of escalating hate speech in the country.

The OIC called on the authorities to "ensure the safety, security and rights of the Muslim community, as well as commitment to respect their religious practices and rituals".

Minorities and immigrants in several countries around the world, including Sri Lanka's neighbour India, have faced attacks and have been blamed for the spread of the virus.

On Friday, UN chief Antonio Guterres said the pandemic has unleashed "a tsunami of hate and xenophobia, scapegoating and scaremongering".

Guterres said "anti-foreigner sentiment", "antisemitic conspiracy theories", and attacks against Muslims have increased.

Sri Lankan authorities have denied accusations of discrimination against Muslims, maintaining that the cremation order applied to other religious groups as well, including minority Christians.

But two Catholics, Oshala Lakmal Anil Herath and Ranmal Anthony Amerasinghe, challenged the cremation order in the Supreme Court in two separate petitions. Herath said the order was "arbitrary" and against the law.

Despite several attempts by Al Jazeera to get a comment from Sri Lanka's Presidential Office and Ministry of Health, no response had been received by the time of publication.

Meanwhile, Sajid says he wants "closure and justice".

"I do not want anyone to go through the trauma and agony that my family went through over the last week."

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020...t-coronavirus-stirs-hate-200510183518512.html
 
NZ to allow 50 people at funerals

Up to 50 people can now say farewell to their loved ones in New Zealand, said authorities, backtracking on a previous ruling.

It comes just hours before New Zealand moves into alert level 2 - which allows retail stores, restaurants, cinemas and other public spaces to reopen.

Under the level two rules, mass gatherings are limited to under 100 people - but the government had maintained that funerals would be restricted to 10 people.

Opposition leader Simon Bridges called the restriction "inhumane".

"It's not just unkind, it's inhumane. If you can socially distance at a movie theatre with 99 other people you can do the same at a funeral," he told Newstalk ZB.

Funeral parlours however, will need to ensure that measures including social distancing are met.
 
Death had not fazed gravedigger Mohammed Shamim up to now, but since the grip of the coronavirus crisis has tightened in New Delhi, a shiver runs up even his spine each time he sees a hearse pull up at the cemetery he tends.

"I've been burying the dead for the last two decades. But until now, I've never been scared for my own life," he said.

The Indian capital has become one of the country's COVID-19 hotspots, with media reports based on graveyard records saying there are 450 dead -- triple the official tally.

Shamim says he alone has dug graves for 115 bodies at the cemetery's designated area for coronavirus dead, about 200 metres away from the others.

Despite the third-generation gravedigger's experience, his family has now started complaining about his job at the Jadid Qabristan Ahle Muslim cemetery, and Shamim has moved his four daughters to his parents' house to reduce the risk of them catching the disease.

"They are scared. Sometimes I lie to them that I don't touch the bodies," said the 38-year-old.

- Prayers and heartache -

Shamim gets a call an hour before the hearse arrives. That is when he becomes nervous.

He prepares the relatives, asking them to put on protective suits, gloves and masks for the burial ceremony, before the family says a prayer and lowers the corpse -- usually wrapped in cloth or plastic sheeting -- into the grave.

The mourners then throw their protective gear into the hole before a mechanical earth-mover fills it in.

Some of the bodies of coronavirus victims arrive without relatives to help with the burial, so Shamim said he has often defied orders to stay away.

"People just refuse to come help with the burial. What can you do? I have to step in," he said, describing "heartbreaking" scenes, like when only a wife and a small child came to the funeral of one man.

At a recent burial, Shamim had to find gloves for a small group who had turned up just with plastic bags for protection. He finally found two pairs and gave one glove each to the four people who were lowering the body.

"I understand it's never easy to bury the dead, but some families don't follow the rules at all. So many times I have had to beg the hospital workers who accompany the body for gloves," Shamim said.

- Fear of contagion -

The gravedigger has been so worried about the pandemic that he has twice been tested for the coronavirus, and paid for one himself of them despite his meagre wages.

He said he has had help from the cemetery management committee and city authorities, but nothing from the government. "I am way too low for them to bother about."

With the number of victims growing in Delhi and his services in greater demand, Shamim says he worries now if his breathing changes or he has a stomach upset.

"I always felt safest around the dead and most vulnerable in the outside world. Now I find it difficult to sleep at night," he said.

https://news.yahoo.com/pandemic-dead-delhi-gravedigger-sleepless-nights-080312216.html
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SindhGovt?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SindhGovt</a> has notified new SOPs for burials. Once the ghusal is done with all protection & shrouding is done, body can be handed over to the legal heirs for a normal burial since after shrouding there is virtually no risk of <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/COVID19?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#COVID19</a> transmission</p>— SenatorMurtaza Wahab (@murtazawahab1) <a href="https://twitter.com/murtazawahab1/status/1262393451196416000?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 18, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Sri Lanka said it would cremate the bodies of 19 Muslim coronavirus victims, overriding the families’ objections against the compulsory policy.

The island nation has been experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases since October, with the number of infections increasing more than eightfold since then to more than 29,300 and 142 dead.

Coronavirus victims’ bodies are claimed by families and then cremated – a practice forbidden under Islamic law – under the strict supervision of health authorities.

But families of 19 Muslims killed by the virus have refused to claim the bodies from a morgue in the capital Colombo, triggering an edict to proceed with cremation that was issued by Attorney General Dappula de Livera.

“Bodies of COVID-19 victims not claimed by families can be cremated in terms of quarantine regulations,” De Livera’s spokeswoman said on Wednesday, adding that the bodies would be cremated this week.

Five were cremated on Wednesday, police said.

The policy has been challenged by Muslims, with 12 petitions filed by the minority community and civil society groups in the Supreme Court.

But the top court rejected the petitions last week, without giving reasons why it made that decision.

Rehab Mahamoor, a research assistant at Amnesty international, told Al Jazeera from Colombo that the cremation of Muslims against their religious beliefs was “unjust”.

“International guidelines clearly state bodies of COVID-19 victims can be buried or cremated and Sri Lanka stands to use the pandemic to further marginalise the Muslim community,” Mahamoor added.

The Sri Lanka Muslim Council has said a majority of the country’s coronavirus victims were Muslim.

A council spokesman added that members of the community feared seeking medical help if they tested positive for COVID-19, as they did not want to be cremated.

The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation last month urged Sri Lanka to permit Muslims to bury their family members “in line with their religious beliefs and obligations”.

Ongoing religious tensions

Sri Lanka made COVID-19 cremations compulsory in April amid fears spread by influential Buddhist monks – who support President Gotabaya Rajapaksa – that burying bodies could contaminate groundwater and spread the disease.

The World Health Organization states both burials and cremations are permitted.

The method of the disposal of the body has become a major talking point in the country, with a section of the media accused of running “anti-Muslim hysteria” and pointing fingers at Muslims for the spread of the
virus.

Following the deadly attacks in April 2019 that killed more than 250 people in churches and at hotels across Sri Lanka, Muslims have faced increased hostility from the Sinhala majority.

A little-known Muslim organisation was blamed for the island nation’s worst attack since the civil war fought between the government forces and the Tamil separatist fighters.

Sri Lanka has a population of about 21 million, of which some 10 percent are Muslims.

https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/...-despite-objections?__twitter_impression=true
 
Cemeteries pollutes ground water, a thin layer of fat like substance is visible on the surface of water in open wells close to big cemeteries, some of the churches in my state stopped using water from there own wells for human consumption
 
Embarrassing stuff from Sri Lanka - it’s not as if they are facing crippling covid deaths. And now they’re begging the Maldives for help.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">On special request from Sri Lankan President <a href="https://twitter.com/GotabayaR?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@GotabayaR</a>, President <a href="https://twitter.com/ibusolih?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ibusolih</a> is consulting stakeholder authorities of the Government of Maldives to assist Sri Lanka in facilitating Islamic funeral rites in the Maldives for Sri Lankan Muslims succumbing to COVID19 pandemic. <a href="https://t.co/EPj6TCCLLp">pic.twitter.com/EPj6TCCLLp</a></p>— Abdulla Shahid (@abdulla_shahid) <a href="https://twitter.com/abdulla_shahid/status/1338428072635187203?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 14, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
To be honest, cremation is much better imo. Far too much space is taken up by graveyards, and there's the problem of the pollution it causes to the ground (though the cremation fumes aren't great I'd imagine). Regardless, it shouldn't be forced on anyone unless it's necessary, which it isn't.
 
To be honest, cremation is much better imo. Far too much space is taken up by graveyards, and there's the problem of the pollution it causes to the ground (though the cremation fumes aren't great I'd imagine). Regardless, it shouldn't be forced on anyone unless it's necessary, which it isn't.

How do the Muslims in your family feel about you possibly cremating them if they die?
 
Colombo, Sri Lanka – Muslims in Sri Lanka are outraged over the forced cremation of a 20-day-old COVID-19 victim last week against the family’s wishes, the latest in more than a dozen such cremations in the Buddhist-majority country since the pandemic erupted.

Ignoring the World Health Organization’s (WHO) guidelines which permit both burials and cremations, Sri Lanka in March made cremation mandatory for people who die or are suspected to have died from the coronavirus infection.

On December 9, baby Shaykh was forcibly cremated in a cemetery in Borella, the largest suburb of Sri Lanka’s capital, Colombo – the youngest among 15 Muslims to be cremated, thereby denying them Islamic funeral rites.

Shaykh’s father MFM Fahim told Al Jazeera he could not gather the courage to witness the burning of his infant son’s body.

“I told them that I cannot go into a place where they are burning my baby. My friends and family asked the authorities how they can go ahead with the cremation when neither of the parents had signed any document giving consent,” Fahim told Al Jazeera.

“They said because the baby is a COVID-19 positive patient, they can cremate. It is as if they rushed to cremate our baby,” he said. ‘When we asked questions, they didn’t have any proper answer.”

“We would have had some comfort if they had allowed us to bury him instead of cremating him by force. That is what is unbearable,” Fahim told Al Jazeera.

Muslims and Christians bury the dead. But Sri Lanka’s mandatory cremation policy for those infected with COVID-19 has left minority communities feeling helpless and angry.

“It is a communal decision they took. The government wants to hurt the feelings of the minorities. They are violating WHO guidelines and basic human rights,” Azath Salley, leader of the National Unity Alliance (NUA) and former governor of the Western Province, told Al Jazeera.

“They did not even spare a child who was only 20 days old. To add to the family’s sorrow, they were even asked by the government to pay [approximately $300] to cover the costs of cremation,” he said.

Salley urged the international community to put pressure on the Sri Lankan government to “respect the beliefs of the minorities and to allow them to bury their dead”.

The Sri Lankan health authorities say the bodies of COVID-19 victims will contaminate the groundwater if they are buried.

On November 4, the government appointed an expert committee to reassess the mandatory cremation policy. In its report submitted on November 22, the committee reaffirmed the policy without citing any reasons.

When the Muslim and Christian groups petitioned the country’s Supreme Court, citing the right to bury according to rituals as a fundamental right, the court on December 1 dismissed their concerns.

Muslims, who make up nearly 10 percent of Sri Lanka’s 21 million people, have faced increased attacks from majority Sinhala Buddhist hardliners following the end of a civil war between Tamil separatists and government forces in 2009.

Relations between the two communities deteriorated further after deadly church attacks on Easter Sunday in April last year, claimed by the ISIL (ISIS) group.

‘Bodies piling up’
Meanwhile, anguished Muslim families are refusing to pay the fee demanded by the state to cover the costs of cremations in protest against the policy.

Last week, among the bodies of Muslim coronavirus victims at a Colombo morgue was the body of Mohammad Jeffrey, 76, who died on November 26.

His nephew Mohammed Farook Mohammed Ashraff still does not know if his uncle was eventually cremated. “We didn’t go after that to the morgue, so we don’t know what happened,” he told Al Jazeera.

“As per our religion, Islam, cremating bodies is prohibited. Therefore we can’t accept what they are doing. So we did not give our consent,” Ashraff said. “I told them to keep the body and do whatever they want.”

Several protests were reported across northeastern Sri Lanka this month against the forced cremations, with many tying white ribbons to the gates of the crematorium as a sign of their anger.

Many others protested online, claiming that Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa was using the pandemic to marginalise Sri Lanka’s minorities, especially Muslims.


Rights group Amnesty International also released a statement, saying the government should ensure all Sri Lankans are “treated equitably”.

“COVID-19 does not discriminate on grounds of ethnic, political or religious differences, and nor should the Government of Sri Lanka,” it said.

Responding to the protests, government spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said the cremation policy is for the expert committee to review “from time to time”.

“The government has nothing to do with reviewing the decision to permit burials,” he said, adding that the government stands by the committee’s decision.

“Also, when we highlight the concerns of Muslims, then there are concerns expressed by the Buddhist community who say even some of their final rites have been deprived and then there is the Catholic community’s sermon, so this is a little complex situation.”

When asked why Sri Lanka was insisting on cremation when the WHO guidelines do not say so, he said that was “a very strong argument but it has to be put forward to the expert committee”.

Maldives’ ‘humane response’ slammed
Sri Lankan Muslims are also angry over the neighbouring Maldives saying it is considering a request from Sri Lanka to allow the burials of Muslims who die of COVID-19.

Maldives officials earlier this week said President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih received a request from Sri Lanka to look into the possibility of allowing such burials.

“On special request from Sri Lankan President @GotabayaR, President @ibusolih is consulting stakeholder authorities of the Government of Maldives to assist Sri Lanka in facilitating Islamic funeral rites in the Maldives for Sri Lankan Muslims succumbing to COVID-19 pandemic,” Maldivian Foreign Minister Abdulla Shahid tweeted.

But Sri Lanka’s Muslims are concerned over the government’s plans to bury their loved ones in the Maldives.

“As far as we are concerned, we don’t want the bodies to be exported to Maldives. We want to be buried on our own soil, ” Ali Zahir Moulana, a former parliamentarian who has been vocal against the forceful cremations, told Al Jazeera.

“Of course, it is nice of the Maldivian government to accept it but it’s a slap on our people. We were all born here, we have been living here and we want to die here.”

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/12/18/i-had-no-stre
 
To be honest, cremation is much better imo. Far too much space is taken up by graveyards, and there's the problem of the pollution it causes to the ground (though the cremation fumes aren't great I'd imagine). Regardless, it shouldn't be forced on anyone unless it's necessary, which it isn't.

I have never had any problems with those who opt for cremation, neither as far as I know have any Muslim govts. It's a choice and probably has some sort of religious significance for many, that's why I find what the Sri Lankan govt are doing absolutely horrendous.
 
The United Nations has urged the Sri Lankan government to halt its policy of forced cremations of coronavirus victims, a practice it said went against the beliefs of the country’s Muslims and other minority populations.

Ignoring the World Health Organization’s guidelines – which permit burials and cremations – Sri Lanka made cremation mandatory in March last year for people who die, or are suspected to have died, from the coronavirus.

The UN’s human rights experts said on Monday the policy could “foment existing prejudices, intolerance and violence”.

“The imposition of cremation as the only option for handling the bodies confirmed or suspected of COVID-19 amounts to a human rights violation,” the experts said in a statement.

“There has been no established medical or scientific evidence in Sri Lanka or other countries that burial of dead bodies leads to increased risk of spreading communicable diseases such as COVID-19.”

The UN experts noted that while the government tasked health authorities to explore burial options amid the pandemic, the advice of a panel of experts to include both burial and cremations as options was allegedly ignored.

“We are concerned to learn that the recommendation to include both cremation and burial options for the disposal of bodies of COVID-19 victims by a panel of experts appointed by the State Minister for Primary Health Services, Pandemics and COVID Prevention was reportedly disregarded by the Government,” the experts noted.

“We hope that the report of local burial options by the main committee referred to by the Health Minister will be available soon and that the authorities will stop pursuing a burial solution in a foreign country.”

Amnesty International also called on authorities to “respect the right of religious minorities to carry out the final rites” according to their own traditions.

Moreover, the UN said pursuing the policy of forced cremations would only deter people from seeking healthcare over “fears of discrimination”.

“We are equally concerned that such a policy deters the poor and the most vulnerable from accessing public healthcare over fears of discrimination,” the experts warned.

Several protests were reported across northeastern Sri Lanka last month against the forced cremations, with many tying white ribbons to the gates of a crematorium as a sign of anger.

Many others protested online, claiming that Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa was using the pandemic to marginalise Sri Lanka’s minorities, especially Muslims.

Muslims, who account for 10 percent of Sri Lanka’s 21 million population, have had a strained relationship with the majority Sinhala Buddhists, deteriorating in the years after the end of civil war in 2009 during which hardline Buddhist groups were blamed for several attacks against Muslims’ businesses and places of worship.

Following the deadly Easter attacks in April 2019 that killed more than 250 people, Muslims have faced increased hostility from the Sinhala majority.

A little-known Muslim organisation was blamed for the island nation’s worst attack since the civil war fought between the government forces and the Tamil separatist fighters.

https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/...-of-human-rights-un?__twitter_impression=true
 
Back
Top