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Hong Kong Cemetery (2006-01-27)

We spent a morning going to a place with KL's sister where their father's burial vault is to pay our respect.  The rows upon rows of solid sealed stone vaults are located next to a cemetery on Hong Kong island.

According to KL's sister, there is this ridiculously weird practice in Hong Kong where upon someone's death, the family can either pay about US$40,000 for a burial hole in the ground or US$9000 to RENT one for seven years.  When the seven years is up, the family will have to exhume the body and find somewhere else to keep the bones.  If that is not the ultimate disturbance to the deceased, I don't know what is?  Do they not know what "Rest In Peace" means?  For those who can't afford the 40K hole, isn't cremation the only other option instead of having had to dig up their loved one later on down the track?

Like many people, KL's family opted to rent a tiny grave (about 5 ft by 3 feet) when his father died 15 years ago.  So after seven years, his father's bones were, too, dug up from the ground and transferred to a stone vault built into a wall.  The transference process and vault incurred another lot of money of course.

The vaults are situated on the third level of a structure which houses nothing but walls of vaults.  There is usually an old black and white photo of the deceased on the covering of the vault under which a simple epitaph is inscribed, and the majority of the pictured gave an austere facial expression.  It is almost as if the deceased knew that at the time the pictures were taken, they were for their own headstones or vaults, so there is really no reason to act happy. 

Many vaults have flowers, usually artificial, placed in a small ring built onto the surface of the vault.  It is easy to feel the creeps when hundreds of straight-faced sepia eyes of the dead look back at you when standing in front of the vaults.  When that happens, it's best to just turn around and enjoy the view of the sea and hillside surrounding the vaults, the same view and tranquility the deceased can enjoy.  Permenantly this time.


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