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For Italy's Muslims, lack of burial space deepens grief in pandemic

09 June 2020, MVT 18:42
A view shows the Muslim section of an overwhelmingly Roman Catholic cemetery of Bruzzano, on the outskirts of Milan, on June 5, 2020. - Like so many others, Italy's Muslim community was not spared the coronavirus that took thousands of lives in recent months. But compounding the pain for the country's religious minority has been the recognition of a grim reality - the lack of space to bury their dead. (Photo by Miguel MEDINA / AFP)
09 June 2020, MVT 18:42

Italy's Muslim community, like others, suffered many deaths as the coronavirus pandemic hit the Mediterranean country hard.

Compounding the pain for the religious minority has been the grim reality of a lack of space to bury their dead.

Imams and Muslim community leaders are now calling for more Islamic cemeteries, or additional space in the country's existing graveyards, as the faithful increasingly want to be buried in Italy, their home.

"We have experienced the pain (of the pandemic), but it has sometimes been deepened when some families could not find a place to bury their dead because there were no Muslim sections in the town cemeteries," Abdullah Tchina, imam of the Milan Sesto mosque, told AFP.

More than 34,000 people have died from the virus in Italy, mostly in the industrial north, and for months global air travel has been at a near-standstill.

As a result, Muslims who died of COVID-19 or other causes could not be repatriated to their countries of origin, as was the practice previously.

That led to a spike in requests for burials -- and the realisation that Italy lacks the space.

Italy's Muslims number around 2.6 million, or 4.3 percent of the population. Living mainly in the country's north, 56 percent hold foreign citizenship, many from countries in North Africa or South Asia.

No official statistics are available on the number of Muslims, whether Italians or foreign nationals, who lost their lives during the outbreak.

A rectangle of pebbles

In the cemetery of Bruzzano, on the outskirts of Milan, 50-something Mustapha Moulay gazes at a greyish earthen tomb in the Muslim section of an overwhelmingly Roman Catholic cemetery.

"It was God's will," he said of the death on April 7 of his 55-year-old wife from COVID-19.

She contracted the virus in a Milan hospital where she had been admitted a month earlier for a minor leg operation, said Moulay, who was born in Morocco and has lived in Italy for 32 years.

The grave has no tombstone, and is simply marked out with a rectangle of pebbles. The freshest graves are strikingly destitute.

The graves of those who died pre-coronavirus look more permanent -- with cement borders and sometimes a marble slab engraved with the crescent moon.

Many other Italian Muslims however were forced to travel long distances to bury their dead, or leave bodies for days in morgues, or even keep them at home while seeking a space.

'A dignified burial'

Under Islamic tradition, the dead must be buried as quickly as possible, preferably within 24 hours.

One of the most extreme cases was that of Hira Ibrahim, a Macedonian woman in Pisogne, near the northern city of Brescia, whose mother died from coronavirus.

Ibrahim had to keep her mother's body at home for more than 10 days for lack of a Muslim cemetery in her community, according to the newspaper La Repubblica.

Countless Muslim families faced similar tragic predicaments during the crisis, the paper said.

Tchina, the imam, said the problem persists even after the biggest waves of deaths have subsided.

The body of a Muslim who died in Milan last week was transported some 50 kilometres (30 miles) away for burial, he said.

Tchina thanked mayors "who opened their (Catholic) cemeteries during this crisis to ensure a dignified burial" for the Muslim dead.

The president of Milan's Islamic Centre, Gueddouda Boubakeur, said that some families in Brescia and Bergamo -- two of the areas hardest hit by the coronavirus -- had to wait "a very long time".

Thanks to the combined efforts of municipalities and central government authorities, solutions were ultimately found most of the time, he said.

"We didn't consider the distance. We went to the first town that accepted the bodies. Our concern was above all to find space," Boubakeur said.

Handful of cemeteries

The Union of Islamic Communities of Italy lists just 76 Islamic cemeteries in the country, which counts nearly 8,000 municipalities.

The oldest was built in 1856, in the northeastern city of Trieste, while Rome's date back only to 1974.

Under Italian law, cemeteries "may provide for special and separate sections" for non-Catholics, but they are not required.

Boubakeur acknowledged the government's cooperation, but urged more "political will" to create additional Muslim burial spaces.

"After this pandemic, 150 municipalities responded positively to our requests" to provide a Muslim section in their cemeteries, Boubakeur said -- just a fraction of the nearly 8,000 municipalities.

Going forward, the need for Muslim burial plots will only increase as immigrants and their offspring prefer to be interred in Italy.

"We used to have a kitty to pay for sending back bodies to their country of origin, but no longer," Boubakeur said.

"Some old people still want to be buried in their country of origin. But many have children, grandchildren in Italy and now prefer to be buried here."

Younger Muslims "want to be buried in Italy because they're Italian", Boubakeur said.

Bruzzano, Italy | AFP

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