April 08, 2004

Bay Area Cemeteries Bowing to Cultural Needs

San Jose Mercury News:

In the Bay Area, where whites are no longer the majority, diversity is redefining communities for the dead as well as the living.

From Richmond to Fremont to San Jose, funeral homes are building rooms where Indian families can wash their deceased with honey and yogurt before cremations, and supplying special pots so Vietnamese families can safely burn the paper money (artificial) their ancestors may need in the afterlife.
Cypress Lawn Memorial Park, which opened Hillside Gardens last year, doesn't stop at providing facilities to meet different cultural needs. It also hosts elaborate ceremonies for Memorial Day and Dia de los Muertos and recently welcomed thousands of people for Ching Ming, the Chinese ancestor-worshiping day.

Some cemeteries are also changing policies that once prized tidy -- and easily maintained -- lawns so visitors can leave stones on Jewish grave sites and tangerines on Chinese ones. Accommodating different cultures is a trend sprouting across America, said Bob Fells, external chief operating officer with the International Cemetery and Funeral Association.

"The cemeteries have become more sensitive and say: These aren't just rocks; they have meaning,'' Fells said.

Posted by Bob King at April 8, 2004 09:58 AM | TrackBack
Related Categories: Area - Social - Demographics | Quadrant - Social

American Diversity: A Demographic Challenge for the Twenty-First Century
State University of New York Press

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