Los Angeles Times

Paying respects to the county’s unclaimed dead

L.A. County’s annual graveside ceremony honors 1,467 ‘human beings that mattered.’

- JON SCHLEUSS jon.schleuss@latimes.com

An interfaith service at a Boyle Heights cemetery honors 1,467 “human beings that mattered.”

On Wednesday morning, about 200 strangers gathered under stormy skies to pay their respects at a Boyle Heights cemetery. Few people in the crowd knew anyone who had been buried, but that did not stop them from rememberin­g the dead.

The annual graveside event honors those whose bodies go unclaimed following their deaths, a practice that dates to the 1890s, when Los Angeles County first began burying indigent and other unclaimed individual­s. This year’s ceremony honored 1,467 people, whose ashes were buried earlier in the week.

County Supervisor Janice Hahn noted how the event coincided with the funeral service of President George H.W. Bush, who was remembered at a 2½-hour ceremony in Washington, D.C.

“It’s just as appropriat­e that on the same day we mourn the loss of our commander in chief, we also mourn the loss of individual­s whose deaths did not receive national attention or much attention at all, but whose lives were no less worthy of our recognitio­n,” she said.

“Some of these individual­s were homeless. Many were poor. And tragically, many of them have no loved ones to grieve for them.”

The bodies of hundreds of men, women and children go unclaimed every year in L.A. County. Some are the last of their families and die peacefully in nursing homes. Others are from families too poor to claim them. Some are stillborn babies.

But they are not nameless.

The county has a list of unclaimed dead dating to 2012. If bodies at the morgue and coroner’s office are not claimed, they are cremated at the county’s expense. Officials hold on to the cremains for three years, waiting for someone to claim them and reimburse the county. If the ashes are not picked up, they’re buried in a single grave.

On Wednesday, the interfaith service incorporat­ed prayers in English, Korean, Spanish and Fijian. A Muslim text was read. A rabbi read Psalm 23 in Hebrew and English. A woman sang a Native American hymn four times, turning 90 degrees and singing to each direction of the globe.

Among those gathered was a man dressed in black who played Bach on an oboe. A woman in a Hello Kitty hat clutched two bouquets just beyond the grave. An older man with a white beard, gold bifocals and a red Santa hat wished people Merry Christmas and handed out candy canes.

Wearing a black hat and sunglasses and gripping yellow flowers, Irene Ng pointed to the neighborin­g Evergreen Cemetery, where headstones and grave markers stood several feet high.

“The thing is, out there, everyone’s buried alone,” said Ng, of Alhambra. “Here, you’re with 1,400 others. You’re buried, but you’re not alone.”

Ng, who also came to last year’s service, said attendance at the ceremony is important, “to let them know they’re not forgotten.”

“It should not be viewed negatively and sad,” she said while pausing to listen as a small chorus began singing “Amazing Grace.”

“I once was lost but now am found ...”

Wednesday’s predicted rain held off, but a chilly wind pushed against the crowd, which encircled the freshly dug grave. No large monuments were erected. Only a wreath, some flowers and a small stone with “2015” — the year those being remembered were cremated — marked the site.

Susan Rorke of Reseda stood among the mourners, wrapped in a pink coat and weeping. Her sister was cremated by the county a few years ago, and she wasn’t able to pay for the services. The county eventually waived the fees, and she was able to get her sister’s ashes before the group burial three years ago.

Through tears, Rorke said she thinks she will end up alone and in a mass grave, like the people here. “The odds are getting higher and higher as I get older,” she said.

“I’m glad that the county does something,” Rorke said. “These were human beings that mattered.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? SUSAN RORKE, who needed a fee waiver to claim her sister’s ashes before the group burial three years ago, joins others to pay respects to the unclaimed remains of more than 1,400 people, most of whom died in 2015.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times SUSAN RORKE, who needed a fee waiver to claim her sister’s ashes before the group burial three years ago, joins others to pay respects to the unclaimed remains of more than 1,400 people, most of whom died in 2015.
 ??  ?? THE INTERFAITH SERVICE in Boyle Heights incorporat­ed prayers in Korean, Spanish and Fijian.
THE INTERFAITH SERVICE in Boyle Heights incorporat­ed prayers in Korean, Spanish and Fijian.

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