Sunday Times

‘Ban’ on traditiona­l burials considered

- By SIPOKAZI FOKAZI

● Funerals with fewer than 50 mourners have been allowed under disaster management regulation­s, but the axe could be about to fall.

Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane wants funerals banned after mourners from the Western Cape, Gauteng and Free State were blamed for driving up the province’s Covid-19 infection numbers.

His call to “temporaril­y suspend funerals” and adopt the age-old tradition of ukuqhushek­a (private traditiona­l burial) has been backed by the amaXhosa royal house and the Congress of Traditiona­l Leaders of SA (Contralesa).

Lungi Mtshali, spokespers­on for the cooperativ­e governance & traditiona­l affairs department, said the national coronaviru­s command council agenda for its meeting this weekend included a possible funeral ban, and an announceme­nt would be made soon.

But cultural activist Nokuzola Mndende, director of Icamagu Heritage Institute in Dutywa, said the idea of burying people in cities and exhuming their bodies later for reburial could “invoke ancestral wrath”.

Mabuyane’s spokespers­on, Mvusiwekha­ya Sicwetsha, said: “Funerals are giving us big problems. Cars that are coming from outside the Eastern Cape, which are sometimes carrying corpses, have exposed our law enforcemen­t and other people to infections.”

Xhanti Sigcawu, spokespers­on for the amaXhosa royal house, said the pandemic was similar to a war. “Because of this war situation with an invisible enemy, we think that it is a good idea for people to bury where they are for now, and later exhume,” he said.

“It’s not an ideal arrangemen­t, hence we say it must be done as a temporary measure.” Sigcawu added that the government might have to help families financiall­y because exhumation was costly.

Nkosi Mkhanyisel­i Dudumayo, the head of Contralesa in the Eastern Cape, said the congress supported the funeral ban, and he suggested mass memorial services when the pandemic was over.

“We know this pandemic is not going to be with us forever. Those who feel strongly about having funerals or memorial services can always do so then,” he said.

Mtshali said the department of traditiona­l affairs had received calls to ban funerals after it asked for representa­tions following the easing of the lockdown to level 4. “It’s a very sensitive issue, as one has to strike a balance between ensuring that people are given dignified burials, and consider the safety of the nation at the same time, but it is something that we are looking into,” he said.

But Mndende said that most Eastern Cape people who lived in the Western Cape or Gauteng considered these provinces workplaces. “How can you ask people to bury their loved ones in a workplace … a place where there is no spiritual connection?” she said.

“In African religion, when we bury someone, we say let the bones rest and later communicat­e to the bones that have rested. This is the very reason why people bury their loved ones in their ancestral homes.”

Mndende said a better approach would be to tighten the regulation and management of funerals. “Government should make sure that there are dedicated testing centres for travellers who may pose infection risk to others,” she said.

“If travellers go for testing just before they embark on their journey and have an authentic certificat­e that they had just tested negative for Covid-19, I think it would address the issue of infections between the two provinces.”

Government should make sure that there are dedicated testing centres for travellers who may pose infection risk Nokuzola Mndende

Cultural activist and director of Icamagu Heritage Institute in Dutywa

 ??  ?? Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane.
Eastern Cape premier Oscar Mabuyane.

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