BBC
The Covid-19 epidemic and the risk of infection have led to new rules in many countries about how we treat the dead. In France, like anywhere else, the restrictions make the process of bereavement even more difficult to bear.
In Béthune, in the northern part of the country, the Charitable Brothers of Saint-Eloi were founded in the 12th Century to help families bury their loved ones. More
God bless them.
Not to be rude, but where do they bury all the people (especially children) the muslims keep killing?
Leave it to the French to come up with something that is both inspiring and somewhat creepy at the same time.
My wife has been instructed to put me in a hefty cinch sack and drag me out to the curb. Who cares once you shuffle off.
Of course these “new rules” don’t apply to the muslims.
They should have left them alone to do their job. Procession and all. These people are volunteers.
rick^
funeral ceremonies are for the living, the survivors who new the deceased.
Like the woman posting on y-tube emptying her husbands ashes in a garbage can, some survivor do not need instructions