The city's land shortage has prompted the municipal
government to offer a larger subsidy to promote sea
burial.
Starting this year, Shanghai doubled its subsidy from
200 yuan (US$25.80) to 400 yuan (US$51.70) to the family of anyone
choosing a sea burial, said Lu Chunling, director of the Shanghai
Funeral and Interment Administrative Office under the Shanghai
Civil Affairs Bureau. The subsidy started 16 years ago.
With a booming elderly population and 100,000 deaths
each year, Shanghai expects to run out of cemetery land in 10
years, according to Lu.
To tackle the problem, the Shanghai government and
cemetery operators have been pushing more land-saving burials such
as small-plot burials and sea burials.
However, most people continue to favor spacious
tombs.
Statistics show that only 7 percent of the families of
the deceased choose land-saving burials. And the percentage of sea
burials, though growing steadily, is only 1.6 percent.
Xu Guoxiang, director of the Sea Burial Department
under Shanghai Funeral and Interment Administrative Office, said
that Shanghai has seen a 10 percent increase in sea burials each
year since it began serving them in 1991. And since 2002, the
Shanghai government began to offer a 200 yuan subsidy to each sea
burial.
In 2000, 815 people were buried at sea and in 2006 the
number went up to 1,613 or 1.6 percent of the total deaths in the
year.
Group sea burials, in which many families arrange to
spread the ashes on the same day, are held several times a year in
early April when the Chinese tomb-sweeping day falls. Winter
solstice, which falls between December 21-23 in the lunar calendar,
is also popular.
Those two days are considered by Chinese as the best
time to bury or memorialize the deceased, according to
Xu.
A site between Changxing and Hengsha islands on the
northeast side of Shanghai is designated by the State Oceanic
Administration for the burial.
"Their ashes are going to sink and rest under the sand
and mud as Chinese tradition believes that the peace of soul can be
found only under mud," Xu said. He also dispelled the concern that
the ashes would be swallowed by fish or shrimp.
"At the beginning, most families who came for sea
burials were highly educated and more influenced by Western
culture. Now, families of all walks of life are coming. Some of
them like the idea of being environmentally friendly and some want
to save money," he said.
The average price for a burial plot is 20,000 yuan
(US$2,587). And the cost for a sea burial is only 150 yuan for each
person who goes along to spread the ashes.
However, there are also families who rent a boat to
spread the ashes, which can cost 35,000 yuan (US$4,527).
In 2005, the family of the late Chinese writer Ba Jin
spread his remains in the sea, according to his wishes.
"As more open-minded families are choosing to bury
their loved ones under the sea, there are still many who hesitate
to act against tradition and as a result, the percentage of sea
burials is still low," Xu said.
"I've met some who registered for the sea burial and
then changed their mind later under the pressure," Xu
said.
(China Daily April 3,
2007)
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