The Borneo Post

Germans rethink their way of death

- David Courbet

Death shouldn’t be a taboo or shocking; we shouldn’t be taken unawares by it, and we certainly shouldn’t talk about it in veiled terms.

Bianca Hauda

BERLIN: Germans are finding that death no longer quite becomes them.

Europe’s biggest economy is rethinking its way of death, with one start-up claiming to have found a way of prolonging life – digitally at least – beyond the grave.

Youlo – a cheery contractio­n of ‘You Only Live Once’ – allows people to record personal messages and videos for their loved ones, which are then secured for several years in a ‘digital tombstone’.

Unveiled at ‘Life And Death 2022’ funeral fair in the northern city of Bremen this month, its creators claim it allows users to have their final word before they slip gently into the good night.

Traditiona­lly, Lutheran northern Germany has long had a rather stiff and stern approach to death.

But as religion and ritual loosened their hold, the crowds at the fair show people are looking for alternativ­e ways of marking their end – a trend some say has been helped by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“With globalisat­ion, more and more people live their lives far from where they were born,” said Corinna During, the woman behind Youlo.

When you live hundreds of kilometres from relatives, visiting a memorial can ‘demand a huge amount of effort’, she said.

And the Covid-19 pandemic has only ‘increased the necessity’ to address the problem, she insisted.

No longer taboo

During lockdowns, many families could only a end funerals by video link, while the existentia­l threat coronaviru­s posed – some 136,000 people died in Germany – also seems to have challenged longtime taboos about death.

All this has been helped by the success of the German-made Netflix series ‘The Last Word’ – a mould-breaking ‘dramedy’ hailed for walking the fine line between comedy and tragedy when it comes to death and bereavemen­t.

Much like British comedian Ricky Gervais’ hit series ‘A er Life’, which turns on a husband grieving the loss of his wife, the heroine of ‘The Last Word’ embraces death and becomes a eulogist at funerals as her way of coping with the sudden death of her husband.

“Death shouldn’t be a taboo or shocking; we shouldn’t be taken unawares by it, and we certainly shouldn’t talk about it in veiled terms,” Bianca Hauda, the presenter of the popular podcast ‘Buried, Hauda’, told AFP.

It aims to “help people be less afraid and accept death,” she said.

“The coronaviru­s crisis will almost certainly leave a trace” on how Germans view death, said sociologis­t Frank Thieme, author of ‘Dying and Death in Germany’.

He argued that there has been a change in the culture around death for “the last 20 to 25 years”.

These days, there are classes to teach you how to make your own coffin and even people who make a living writing personalis­ed funeral speeches. Digital technology which was ‘barely acceptable not so long ago’ was also beginning to make its mark, he said.

Straitjack­et

Historian Norbert Fischer of Hamburg University said they have been a shi toward individual­ism in the ‘culture of burials and grief since the beginning of the 21st century’.

“The traditiona­l social institutio­ns of family, neighbourh­ood and church are losing their importance faced with a funeral culture marked by a much greater freedom of choice,” he said.

However, the change has been slower in Germany because ‘legal rules around funerals are much stricter than most other European countries’, said sociologis­t Thorsten Benkel, which is at odds with ‘what individual­s aspire to’.

Some political parties like the Greens also want to loosen this legislativ­e ‘straitjack­et’, particular­ly the law known as the ‘Friedhofsz­wang’.

The 200-year-old rule bans coffins and urns being buried anywhere, but in a cemetery.

Originally passed to prevent outbreaks of disease, it has been largely surpassed as a public health measure, particular­ly since cremation became popular.

Germany also had a very particular relationsh­ip with death in the a ermath of World War II.

Back in 1967, the celebrated psychoanal­ysts Margarete and Alexander Mitscherli­ch put Germany on the couch with their book ‘The Inability to Mourn’.

One of the most influentia­l of the post-war era, the book argued that Germans had collective­ly swept the horrors commi ed by the Nazis in their name – and their own huge losses and suffering during the war – under the carpet.

Thankfully, said Benkel, mentalitie­s have ‘changed an awful lot since’.

 ?? ?? Staff move coffins with the le ering ‘Corona’ through the mourning hall before cremation at the crematoriu­m in Meissen, eastern Germany, during the ongoing novel coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic. The number of people who have died from Covid-19 in Europe, the long-time epicentre of the pandemic, has passed two million, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said.
Staff move coffins with the le ering ‘Corona’ through the mourning hall before cremation at the crematoriu­m in Meissen, eastern Germany, during the ongoing novel coronaviru­s (Covid-19) pandemic. The number of people who have died from Covid-19 in Europe, the long-time epicentre of the pandemic, has passed two million, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said.
 ?? — AFP file photos ?? Vistors walk past an angel figure on a grave at the ‘Alter Domfriedho­f St Hedwig’ cemetery during the ‘Sunday of the Dead’ commemorat­ions in Berlin. Long weighed down by austere and normalised traditions in this country with a Lutheran tradition, the question of death and how to deal with it is marked in Germany by a gradual desacralis­ation of rituals, a trend accelerate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic.
— AFP file photos Vistors walk past an angel figure on a grave at the ‘Alter Domfriedho­f St Hedwig’ cemetery during the ‘Sunday of the Dead’ commemorat­ions in Berlin. Long weighed down by austere and normalised traditions in this country with a Lutheran tradition, the question of death and how to deal with it is marked in Germany by a gradual desacralis­ation of rituals, a trend accelerate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic.
 ?? ?? The inscriptio­n ‘In God’s love receive me’ is seen on a stone cross on the Invalids’ Cemetery (Invalidenf­riedhof) during the ‘Sunday of the Dead’ commemorat­ions in Berlin.
The inscriptio­n ‘In God’s love receive me’ is seen on a stone cross on the Invalids’ Cemetery (Invalidenf­riedhof) during the ‘Sunday of the Dead’ commemorat­ions in Berlin.
 ?? ?? A coffin is moved for cremation into the furnace at the crematoriu­m in Meissen, eastern Germany, during the ongoing novel coronaviru­s pandemic.
A coffin is moved for cremation into the furnace at the crematoriu­m in Meissen, eastern Germany, during the ongoing novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

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