Daily Dispatch

Your final resting place can cost you profoundly

SA is seen as the most unequal society on earth, something which even persists six-foot under

- KIM HARRISBERG

If death is the great equaliser, South Africa’s designer graveyards look like one of the best ends on offer.

With hot tea, wifi and soft sofas – not to mention birds and a rippling dam – a new breed of luxury cemetery is reinforcin­g divides between Johannesbu­rg’s haves and have-nots.

Memorial Park cemetery in Soweto, South Africa’s biggest township, is one of five cemeteries owned by listed company Calgro M3, whose fortunes are tied to land and housing.

The plush cemeteries they have added to their portfolio of houses and retirement homes have sharply divided opinion: lauded as a wise investment by some, derided as elitist by other observers.

In a nation where land, and who owns it, are sensitive and contested topics – a quarter century after apartheid – the business of dying has split opinion, too.

“Everyone deserves a decent sendoff,” said Lawrence Pooe, who buried his cousin in the cemetery last month.

“But unfortunat­ely this is dependent on your pocket,” he said from the Nasrec Memorial Park office.

Grave plots at the Nasrec Memorial Park range from R24,500 to R360,000 for an eight-person family plot with extra features, such as plants and benches.

A burial plot at a public cemetery costs R3,000 on average.

SAFE SPACE

Aside from the luxury add-ons, Memorial Parks promise a wellmainta­ined and safe space to bury and mourn loved ones in a country known for widespread crime, even occurring in its cemeteries.

Mourners have reported graveside muggings, ransacked cars and coffins dug up to be resold.

Land is a hot-button issue in what is the world’s most unequal country, according to the World Bank, where the richest 10% of South Africans own about 71% of the country’s wealth, and the bottom 60% control only 7%.

Last year, President Cyril Ramaphosa launched a process to change the constituti­on with a proposed redistribu­tion of land aimed at addressing high levels of inequality.

Discontent has triggered protests and occupation­s, with 72% of farmland owned by whites, who make up just 8.5% of the population, according to a government land audit.

Dead or alive, the inequality persists powerfully.

“The cemetery is an idiom for the segregatio­n we still see today in post-apartheid South Africa,” said Thulisile Mphambukel­i, a town planner and senior lecturer at the University of the Free State.

In Johannesbu­rg there are 32 public cemeteries, plus a handful of private ones, according to the City of Johannesbu­rg.

With about 14,000 burials a year, the city estimates there are enough plots available for the next half century.

“Designer cemeteries segregate South Africans on class. It is a continuity of inequality created by apartheid,” Mphambukel­i said.

Memorial Parks denies any “economic apartheid”.

“This is not an elitist space,” said Wikus Lategan, chief executive of Calgro M3, in an interview at the cemetery.

Lategan said the company buries South Africans from many religions, races and income groups and that his company is providing a much-needed service.

“South Africans invest in funeral policies that can cover the costs,” said Lategan, whose fees include security, maintenanc­e and tombstone licensing.

The plots can be paid for over time, with no additional costs,

Lategan added, making them accessible to a wider market.

“There is such a great need for this,” said Lategan.

“In public cemeteries, mourners fear they can be raped or attacked.”

Police say figures on cemetery crime are not documented but local media have reported rapes, muggings and headstone theft nationwide.

“We are restoring safety and dignity,” Lategan said.

BANQUETS, CASKETS

A total of 18.9 million South Africans have funeral insurance, according to online comparison website, hippo.co.za.

“The cost of a funeral is up to you,” said Masentle Zikalala, a government official who has reserved five grave plots for her family at the Nasrec cemetery.

“A ‘decent’ funeral can be simple, with few people and a basic meal afterwards.

“But generally, this is not how South African funerals are,” said Zikalala.

An average funeral will involve a cow for slaughteri­ng at about R6,000, undertaker fees at about R4,000, a tombstone can go up to R7,000 and a coffin for R8,000, according to online insurance quotes.

This in a country with a 29% unemployme­nt rate, according to government statistics.

Despite this, South African households can spend up to a year’s salary on a funeral, according to research published in the University of Chicago Press.

Although an estimated quarter of the nearly 4,000 funerals examined in the study had some form of insurance, another quarter had to borrow to meet the cost.

“We have funerals sometimes where 10-15,000 people attend,” explained Lategan.

This can all be very different in public cemeteries.

Khanyi, who asked that her real name be concealed, recalled her grandmothe­r’s burial in 2018 in Klipspruit public cemetery in Soweto, about 15 minutes from the Nasrec Memorial Park.

“We wanted her to be buried with my grandfathe­r, but the cemetery was full, so the plan was to open up my grandfathe­r’s grave and bury them together,” said Khanyi.

But it was raining heavily and Khanyi’s family were told they would have to bury their grandmothe­r in another cemetery.

“Six months later, we had to exhume her and bring her back to the original cemetery.”

The total cost ended up at R27,000, more than eight times what Khanyi’s family had hoped to pay.

“It was traumatic,” Khanyi said.

The service at Memorial Parks is “lovely and necessary”, she said, but the pricing “absurd for your average South African”.

GET DEATH RIGHT

On entering Memorial Parks, visitors are greeted by security guards, ushered indoors and offered a seat and cup of tea.

This contrasts strongly with Zikalala’s experience at a nearby public cemetery where she always carries pepper spray and only visits at busy times to stay safe.

Mphambukel­i said all people should have access to a safe and dignified mourning space.

“If we can get death right, then we can think about desegregat­ing the way we live, too,” said Mphambukel­i.

Government should own cemeteries and mourners pay a subsidised, standard fee, said Mphambukel­i.

“But this would require willingnes­s from government, and possible collaborat­ion from private sector,” she added.

Jenny Moodley, spokespers­on from Johannesbu­rg’s City Parks, which maintains public parks and burial grounds, said private-public partnershi­ps are “encouraged”.

In the interim, plots sell, money rolls in – Memorial Parks revenue increased by 66% from 2018 – and lives come to an end.

“Death is the one thing we will all experience,” said Mphambukel­i.

“I want everyone, irrespecti­ve of their background­s, to be able to mourn equally.” – The Thomson Reuters Foundation

Designer cemeteries divide South Africans on class. It is an extension of inequality created by apartheid

Death is the one thing we will all experience. I want everyone, irrespecti­ve of their background, to mourn equally

 ??  ?? OUR GROUND: Masentle Zikalala stands on the reserved burial plots she has bought for herself and four other family members at Nasrec Memorial Park in Soweto.
OUR GROUND: Masentle Zikalala stands on the reserved burial plots she has bought for herself and four other family members at Nasrec Memorial Park in Soweto.

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