Houston Chronicle

India changes burial rituals for COVID-19

- By Natasha Mikles Milkes is a lecturer in philosophy at Texas State University. This piece was first published in The Conversati­on.

In the past several weeks, the world has looked on in horror as the coronaviru­s rages across India. With hospitals running out of beds, oxygen and medicines, the official daily death toll has averaged around 3,000. Many claim that number could be an undercount; crematoriu­ms and cemeteries have run out of space.

The majority of India’s population are Hindu, who favor cremation as a way of disposing of the body. But the Muslim population, which is close to 15 percent, favors burying its dead.

Generally, tradition holds that the body is to be cremated or buried as quickly as possible — within 24 hours for Hindus, Jains and Muslims, and within three days for Sikhs. This need for rapid disposal has also contribute­d to the current crisis.

Hundreds of families want their loved ones’ bodies cared for as quickly as possible, but there is a shortage of people who can do the funerals and last rites. This has led to a situation where people are paying bribes in order to get space or a furnace for cremation. There are also reports of physical fights, and intimidati­on.

As a scholar interested in the ways Asian societies tell stories about the afterlife and prepare the deceased for it, I argue that the coronaviru­s crisis represents an unpreceden­ted cultural cataclysm that has forced the Indian culture to challenge the way it handles its dead.

Cremation grounds and colonial rule

Many Americans think of cremation happening within an enclosed, mechanized structure, but most Indian crematoriu­ms, known as “shmashana” in Hindi, are open-air spaces with dozens of brick-and-mortar platforms upon which a body can be burned on a pyre made of wood.

Hindus and Sikhs will dispose of the remaining ashes in a river. Many shmashana are therefore built near the banks of a river to allow for easy access, but many well-off families often travel to a sacred city along the banks of the river Ganges, such as Haridwar or Benares, for the final rituals. Jains — who have traditiona­lly given significan­t considerat­ion to humanity’s impact on the environmen­tal world — bury the ashes as a means to return the body to the Earth and ensure they do not contribute to polluting rivers.

The workers who run shmashana often belong to the Dom ethnicity and have been doing this work for generation­s;

they are lower caste and subsequent­ly perceived by many as polluted for their intimate work with dead bodies.

The act of cremation has not always been without controvers­y. In the 19th century, British colonial officials viewed the Indian practice of cremation as barbaric and unhygienic. But they were unable to ban it given its pervasiven­ess.

However, Indians living in the United Kingdom, South Africa and Trinidad often had to fight for the right to cremate the dead in accordance with religious rituals because of the mistaken and often racist belief that cremation was primitive, alien and evronmenta­lly polluting.

Rituals and a long history

The earliest writings on Indian funerary rituals can be found in the Rig Veda — a Hindu religious scripture orally composed thousands of years ago, potentiall­y as early as 2000 B.C. In the Rig Veda, a hymn, traditiona­lly recited by a priest or an adult male, urges Agni, the Vedic god of fire, to “carry this man to the world of those who have done good deeds.”

From the perspectiv­e of Hindu, Jain and Sikh rituals, the act of cremation is seen as a sacrifice, a final breaking of the

ties between the body and the spirit so it may be free to reincarnat­e. The body is traditiona­lly bathed, anointed and carefully wrapped in white cloth at home, then carried ceremonial­ly, in a procession, by the local community to the cremation grounds.

While Hindus and Sikhs often decorate the body with flowers, Jains avoid natural flowers for concern of inadverten­tly destroying the lives of insects that may be hidden within the petals. In all of these faiths, a priest or male member of the family recites prayers. It is traditiona­lly the eldest son of the deceased who lights the funerary pyre; women typically do not go to the cremation ground.

After the ceremony, mourners return home to bathe themselves and remove what they regard as the inauspicio­us energy that surrounds the cremation grounds. Communitie­s host a variety of postmortem rituals, including scriptural recitation­s and symbolic meals, and in some Hindu communitie­s the sons or male members of household will shave their head as a sign of their bereavemen­t. During this mourning period, lasting from 10 to 13 days, the family performs scriptural recitation­s and prayers in honor of their deceased loved one.

The changing times of COVID-19

The wave of death from the COVID-19 pandemic has forced transforma­tions to these long-establishe­d religious rituals. Makeshift crematoriu­ms are being constructe­d in the parking lots of hospitals and in city parks.

Young women may be the only ones available to light the funerary pyre. Families in quarantine are forced to use WhatsApp and other video software to visually identify the body and recite digital funerary rites.

Media reports have pointed out how in some cases, crematoriu­m workers have been asked to read prayers traditiona­lly reserved for Brahmin priests or people from a higher caste. Muslim burial grounds have begun to run out of space and are tearing up parking lots to bury more bodies.

‘The work of the dead’

While other important rituals such as marriage and baptism may take on a new appearance in response to cultural changes, social media conversati­ons or economic opportunit­ies, funerary rituals change slowly.

Historian Thomas Laqueur has written on what he calls “the work of the dead” — the ways in which the bodies of the deceased participat­e in the social worlds and political realities of the living.

In India’s coronaviru­s pandemic, the dead are announcing the health crisis that the country believed it had conquered. As recently as April 18, India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi was holding crowded political rallies, and his government allowed the massive Hindu pilgrimage festival of Kumbh Mela to proceed a year early in response to the auspicious forecasts of astrologer­s. Authoritie­s began to act only when the deaths became impossible to ignore. But even then, the Indian government appeared more concerned about removing social media posts that were critical of its functionin­g.

India is one of the world’s largest vaccine-producing nations, and yet it was unable to make or even purchase the needed vaccines to protect its population.

The dead have important stories to tell about neglect, mismanagem­ent or even our global interdepen­dence — if we care to listen.

 ?? Getty Images ?? A worker tends to a funeral pyre for a COVID victim Wednesday at a mass crematoriu­m site on the banks of the Ganges river in Allahabad, India.
Getty Images A worker tends to a funeral pyre for a COVID victim Wednesday at a mass crematoriu­m site on the banks of the Ganges river in Allahabad, India.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States