2016-02-29

Nobody dies alone in Jakarta
anymore

The Jakarta Post | February 28 2016
Moses Parlindungan, Ivany A.
Arbi, Viriya P. Singgih, Winny Tang, Winda A. Charmila, M. Reza
Zafiruddin, Fachrul Sidiq, Radhitya Diva
Putra andSepsha
D. Restiananingsih

The city’s
graves are filling up, and more than a few people die every day. A
team from The Jakarta
Post recently visited cemeteries across Greater Jakarta,
meeting mourners rich and poor, as well as organizations providing
funeral services, to see how the capital and its surroundings meet
the needs of the deceased and their grieving families. The
following contributed to this
report:.

San Diego Hills Memorial Park in Karawang, West Java, was busy one
day with two simultaneous funerals. In the Christian section, a
family gathered under white tents to bury a husband and
father.

Around 50 people sat on folding chairs beside the coffin of the
43-year-old, who had died, relatives said, of cancer. The ceremony
proceeded with hymns, the reminiscences of loved ones and prayers
for the deceased, before proceeding to the burial.

Down the hill in the Buddhist section, another group of white tents
sheltered mourners dressed in white for the burial of mother,
grandmother and great grandmother Kheng Tjin Kwai, 82.

Almost 40 people knelt before the altar set in front of the grave.
A Buddhist monk led the ritual, while a grief counselor assisted
mourners in following the prayers, the burning of joss paper
effigies and other traditions.

Three mourners said Kheng’s descendants — who included both
Buddhists and Christians — wanted to honor her ancient Chinese
beliefs and traditions.

A day before, at the Tegal Alur II Cemetery in West Jakarta, which
primarily serves Muslims, a man sat across from a flower kiosk,
where mourners can buy petals and other burial
items.

Hajair, a gravedigger who digs resting places for the unidentified
dead, said he had just finished preparing a final resting place for
his cousin, Titin Sumarni, 41, a teacher.

Titin’s mother, Rokyah, said her daughter had, shortly before
dying, fulfilled the teaching requirements for a Bachelor’s
degree.

“We never thought that God would call her so soon,” she
said.

Nobody in the family, including Titin’s husband, Erpin, was
prepared to face the challenges of burying someone in Jakarta
without assistance.

“As it turned out, our community chief assisted us by arranging for
chairs and tents for guests at our home, and for the hearse to
bring the body to the cemetery,” Erpin explained.

Dying in Jakarta is a complicated process, even with the
bureaucratic reforms introduced in the 2007 bylaw on cemeteries.
Yet all of the above families found someone willing and able to
assist them in their time of grief.

The difference in levels of service for the dead, as for the
living, depends on social status, wealth, religion, land
availability and access to information about regulations, services
and costs.

Land scarcity presents a challenge to the Jakarta administration,
as the capital’s already large population continues to grow, with
27,375 people dying annually.

The bureaucracy of death requires relatives of the deceased to
present the following documents: death certificate from a medical
facility, the deceased’s identity and family card, ID of the family
member in charge of burial, a subdistrict reference letter to
funeral authorities and proof of payment from Bank DKI. All of this
is required just for a burial plot.

According to Tegal Alur Cemetery administrator H. Suaeb, funerals
no longer entail illegal fees solicited at cemeteries, though
people often give tips to the gravediggers and
groundskeepers.

Religion and tradition further complicate the funeral
process.

Kasman Sukandar, a grief consultant from Anugrah Jasa, said he had
been providing advice to mourners since the
1990s.

“Even people of the same religion may practice different rituals,
depending on what ethnic group or traditions they have inherited,”
he said.

Jakarta Cathedral parish priest, Stefanus Bratakartana SJ,
explained that some Catholics of Chinese descent might not adhere
to church rituals. “If a Chinese family wants to cremate their
relative, it is up to them,” he said.

Confucians, Buddhists and sometimes Protestants from various
ethnicities may also opt for cremation. Only Muslims of all ethnic
backgrounds refuse to cremate their dead, insisting on burial
within 24 hours.

Pastor Ainul Nurul said that in the Protestant tradition, the focus
was on how to comfort the grieving family. Prayer services “can be
held at any time that is convenient for the family and friends”,
she said.

Buddhists and Confucians generally hold processions before burial,
which may mean the dead are not buried immediately.

In Hinduism, the rituals following cleansing and shrouding occur
simultaneously with the preparation of the body for burial and
possible later cremation.

Nevertheless, nobody dying in Jakarta needs to worry about having
someone there to lay them to rest. If the government does not help
you, the community will, and commercial services are always
available.

Under the cemeteries bylaw, all burial costs are borne by the
municipality. The only charges imposed are burial plot rents,
ranging from nothing to Rp 100,000 for three
years.

In Jakarta, each subdistrict has a One-stop Integrated Service
Center, which assists with various permits — including access to
burial plots.

When someone dies, his or her loved ones receive a death
certificate to take to their community or neighborhood chiefs, who
then gives them a referral letter for the one-stop center
determining their payment status based on family income. If the
deceased is unidentified or has no next of kin, he or she is buried
in Tegal Alur Cemetery. For families of the deceased categorized as
poor, burial plots are free.

If the family is considered able to pay, the rental
fee for a burial plot depends on their level of income. The
one-stop center then provides a letter to Bank DKI, which
calculates the rental cost and provides three receipts, one each
for the family, the cemetery and the one-stop center. Once proof of
payment has been established, the deceased can be buried.

What the government does not do, the community — religious
organizations, foundations, freelance counselors, neighbors, etc. —
can.

The Pesantren Islam Al-Azhar Foundation, through its funeral
process unit founded in 1992, assists with transportation,
cleansing and shrouding of the deceased for fees between Rp 1.5
million and Rp 3 million for non-members. For members, who pay a
monthly fee of

Rp 5,000 each, all services are free.

Religious organizations also offer services — counseling, prayer
recital, cleansing and cosmetic procedures, coffin procurement,
hearses, grave-keeping and administrative assistance.

The business sector also provides funeral-related goods and
services for anyone requiring them at costs ranging from affordable
on a small budget to extremely expensive.

The Cilincing Crematorium provides coffins and cremations for as
little as Rp 3.3 million, or less if the bereaved can provide proof
of poverty.

For those with deeper pockets, Heaven Funeral Home and Crematorium
in Gedong Panjang provides coffins, funeral service space,
cremation and administrative service for total fees ranging from
around Rp 40 million to Rp 103 million.

The Cikini Funeral Home provides preburial and precremation
services, covering cleansing, embalming, make-up, coffins and
funeral service space. Total fees can reach Rp 43 million.

Richer families can also take a luxurious route to laying their
loved ones to rest.

Lestari Memorial Park in Karawang, West Java, offers burial plots
ranging from Rp 58 million to Rp 10 billion, as well as cremation
services ranging from cremation alone at Rp 5.5 million, to
cremation and the scattering of ashes at Rp 8
million.

This cemetery complex also provides a columbarium for the storage
of crematory urns or boxes.

San Diego Hills Memorial Park and Funeral Homes, meanwhile, offers
burial plots ranging from Rp 26.7 million to Rp 10.1 billion. This
500-hectare funeral and burial complex in Karawang also provides
chapels, Islamic prayer rooms, other funeral service spaces and a
multipurpose building.

With such a range of facilities and services, it is no longer
necessary to fear the age-old adage: “Don’t die in
Jakarta."

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