Rajmohan
Gandhi, Harsh Mander, Sharmila Tagore, Nayantara Sehgal among others urge
people to let science guide their actions when bidding farewell to loved ones
|
New Delhi(Agencies):Amid the
heartbreaking visuals of bodies of COVID deceased being dumped into pits by
municipal staffers in Karnataka, eminent Indian citizens on Wednesday wrote an
open letter to the people, saying there was no scientific reason for families
to not perform the last rites of loved ones who had succumbed to the virus.
Signed by Rajmohan Gandhi, Harsh Mander, Sharmila Tagore
and Nayantara Sehgal among others, the letter notes that the stigma around
COVID-19 has spread from the living to the dead, even though there are detailed
scientific and official guidelines that show that a dignified death is
possible.
“It is deeply
saddening that the fear and stigma around COVID-19 has caused families to
abandon performing the last rites for their family members.
“Journalists have
reported of public officials and bystanders performing the last rites of
individuals with family members unwilling to do so for fear the infection,” the
signatories say, adding that a proper and complete understanding of the disease
and dynamics is needed, along with a strong public campaign, to improve
everyone’s understanding of the disease.
“In these
challenging times science must guide us in negotiating the difficult boundary
between public and individual safety and misapprehension and stigma. It is
completely safe for the last rites of a loved one to be performed by family
members and for them to have a respectful burial or cremation,” says the letter
in an appeal to people to see off their loved ones respectfully.
The signatories cite Ministry of Health‘s March 15
guidelines on burials which state that the family may view the face of their
loved one before they are cremated or buried and all religious rituals that do
not require contact are allowed.
“There is indeed
no scientific reason why people who have lost their loved ones to COVID-19
cannot see the face of their loved one before the last rites, and there is no
rational or scientific barrier for them to undertake with due safety the
religious and cultural practices associated with death rites which they believe
in and which will give them solace, as long as this does not involve crowding
and physical contact,” said the writers of the letter noting that the process
of grieving begins with this important ritualised moment of seeing the loved
one off.
Among other signatories to the open letter are Vikram
Patel, Shah Alam Khan, Sujatha Rao, Keshav Desiraju, Vandana Prasad, Mathew
Varghese, Apoorvanand, Dinesh Mohan, Vikas Bajpai, Imran Qadeer, Syeda Hameed,
John Dayal, Navsharan Singh, Natasha Badhwar, Radhika Alkazi, Rita Manchanda,
Tapan Bose, Armaan Alkazi and Anwar-ul-Haq.
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