The Star Malaysia

Grave problem at ‘celebrity’ cemetery

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IN death, as in life, it is expensive to have famous people as your neighbours.

There is hardly any space left at Highgate Cemetery, a Victorian graveyard in north London where Karl Marx, George Michael and George Eliot are buried, along with 170,000 other Londoners.

The price of a grave to rest in esteemed peace? It starts at £25,000 (RM150,191).

That cost gained attention in British media recently after the historic site notified the public it had begun a process of adding new gravesites.

Many pointed out the capitalist irony of such a high price tag, suggesting that the large fee for a plot near Karl Marx would make the so-called father of communism “turn in his grave.” Marx’s tomb is a major draw for the cemetery, and visitors pay £10 (RM60) to explore the grounds.

“Cemeteries are quite expensive places to maintain,” said Ian Dungavell, the chief executive of the charity that manages Highgate Cemetery, adding that dwindling space on the property contribute­d in part to the high cost of being buried there. “We’re still dealing with a very limited resource.”

There was “no uplift,” he said, for being in Marx’s vicinity. “That’s just the price.”

But the group’s seemingly capitalist approach is part of an existentia­l problem that other cemeteries, in Britain and elsewhere, are also facing: how does a burial ground continue operating if it is running out of space?

Cremations are popular in much of Britain, according to surveys from the Cremation Society that suggest more than 70% of the dead have opted for that method in the past two decades. In comparison, about 59% of the deceased in the US were cremated in 2022.

But even with a high cremation rate, Britain is facing a shortage of graves in many areas. In some burial grounds in London, experts say, there is already no more room, and other cities are not far behind.

“Crisis is an appropriat­e word,” said Helen Frisby, a historian and research fellow at the University of Bath. “We have a massive burial space problem.”

Law bodies are reviewing current regulation­s around burials, but the addition of new plots at Highgate Cemetery would make it one of a few London burial authoritie­s that can reuse graves. That practice might help graveyards survive, experts say, while challengin­g the idea of “burial in perpetuity”.

European countries have adapted the short-term leasing of plots or recycling graves to deal with crowding.

Legislatio­n in 2022 gave Highgate Cemetery the power to take back old and unused graves, a process that it has optimistic­ally termed “grave renewal”. Empty graves and graves where burials took place more than 75 years ago can legally be repurposed.

The proposal will, for the moment, only affect about 500 graves in the cemetery, Dungavell said.

Some grave owners were last registered in the 1870s. Others were simply too hard to trace, and the cemetery has spread the word by posting public notices about plots set to be repurposed. Owners of those graves will have until July to object to their reuse.

For graves without objections, the existing remains will be interred deeper into the same spot, and new burials will take place on top of them.

The idea is contentiou­s, which was evident on a recent visit to the cemetery. Even on a chilly day, visitors were weaving through tree-lined pathways to take in

“It is a very prestigiou­s cemetery. It is able to command those fees. Most cemeteries can’t.” Helen Frisby

epitaphs from artists, philosophe­rs and beloved residents.

“To me, it’s kind of sacrosanct,” said Thomas Swinburne, 57, who was visiting London from the northeast of England. “The body’s at rest. I wouldn’t want any of my family members disturbed in that way.”

Highgate, built in 1839 on the city’s outskirts, is part of a group of Victorian graveyards known as the “Magnificen­t Seven”. As London’s population boomed, the private cemeteries were designed to solve overcrowdi­ng in existing churchyard­s.

Now it is close to full itself. Dungavell said his team had scoured the cemetery’s maps for any gaps. In the past, they had mounded earth on top of existing graves to create new burial sites, or narrowed paths to create more cremation spots. (Those start at £5,000 (RM30,038).

“I wouldn’t want to clog the place up any further,” he said.

Other ideas he is exploring include shared vaults for those who are cremated. The group is also relying on funding to help maintain the nature at its site and make it more accessible for visitors.

But despite all the efforts, the price tag for burial is still high.

“It is ironic that these highly expensive graves are located close to one of our most strident critics of capitalism,” said Julie Rugg, a researcher in social policy at the University of York. But, she said, the new system was a pragmatic response to the need to protect the site, and that the money would contribute to its management.

Frisby said the cost for a grave in Highgate Cemetery was not typical for Britain, and that graves usually cost thousands of pounds, rather than tens of thousands. But there was a “social cachet” to being buried in such a historical ground, she said.

“It is a very prestigiou­s cemetery. It is able to command those fees,” she said. “Most cemeteries can’t.”

Some visitors to Highgate said it is time to consider different ways of putting loved ones to rest.

“If you run out of space, you have to think about new ways,” said Marlis Graf, 34, a tourist from Germany who was visiting the grave of Karl Marx. “I’m actually a fan of eco-burials, where we don’t have any gravestone­s or something at all. Just trees.” — ©2024 The New York Times Company

 ?? — ©2024 The New York Times Company ?? Visitors to Highgate Cemetery, a Victorian graveyard where Karl Marx, George Michael and George Eliot are buried, in London in these file photos. Graves can run upwards of £25,000, and the cemetery is trying to add more space.
— ©2024 The New York Times Company Visitors to Highgate Cemetery, a Victorian graveyard where Karl Marx, George Michael and George Eliot are buried, in London in these file photos. Graves can run upwards of £25,000, and the cemetery is trying to add more space.
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