Arab News

Victims of COVID-19 fill Muslim cemeteries in France

- Randa Takieddine Paris

The closure of France’s borders with some African countries due to the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19) has created problems regarding the burial of deceased Muslims of North African origin.

Since the COVID-19 outbreak, Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, which all have large numbers of immigrants in France, have refused the repatriati­on of their deceased. This in turn has led to the filling up of Muslim cemeteries in France. According to the president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM), Mohammed Moussaoui, there are 600 areas for Muslim tombs in France; the tombs face Makkah and are distribute­d over 35,600 municipali­ties.

Suspending the repatriati­on of the deceased from North African countries has caused distress to Muslim families because of the lack of space for Muslims in French cemeteries. Many of those families have had to place their relatives’ bodies in morgues as they wait for transport back to their homelands. Kamal Kabtane, the imam at the

Grand Mosque of Lyon, explained to Arab News that there are only limited areas in Muslim cemeteries.

No repatriati­on

Most families are unable to send their relatives back to their homelands and this has resulted in many Muslims being buried in France even though not all French towns have Muslim areas in their cemeteries. This of course has in turn led to the few Muslim cemeteries having no more burial spaces.

Kabtane said: “We had to find quick solutions for these problems. We had to bury them with non-Muslims and explain to their families that maybe we would be able to move them later. In some cases, many families who want to bury their loved ones in their homelands have put them temporaril­y in morgues.

“In Lyon, we have fewer than a thousand spaces, and I raised this issue to try to find solutions. We must think in the long term and for all those who were born here and consider France their homeland. We must establish genuine highcapaci­ty Muslim cemeteries oriented toward Makkah, and not just small areas for Muslims.” Kabtane noted that the management of cemeteries in France is municipal and each mayor must decide for his/her own town.

The Republican Principle clearly mandates the neutrality of cemeteries. One’s religion is unrecogniz­able in cemeteries apart from Muslim areas and the ones for Jews who had their own cemeteries before the 1905 law, the French Secularity Law.

Ministries cannot give orders to mayors, explains Kabtane; they make the laws but mayors make the decisions concerning cemeteries. Moussaoui told Arab News that he had asked President Emmanuel Macron to leave the cemetery problems to prefects because discussing the issue with the prefects would be easier than doing so with 35,600 mayors.

 ?? Reuters ?? A woman waits by a road in Saint-Brieuc in Brittany, France.
Reuters A woman waits by a road in Saint-Brieuc in Brittany, France.

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