Friday, July 25, 2014

THE RE-USE OF GRAVES AND THE NEED FOR CEMETERY MANAGEMENT IN KATSINA


                    
I had to tarry from concluding the rhapsody on APC with the title ‘Reincarnation of the black sheep’ I started and was supposed to be on net since the last two weeks  to enable me pass one or two comments on the above stated topic. I have always wanted to write on this issue long time ago but for one reason or the other I was not able to do so. The opportunity came last week Friday after attending the burial of one Assistant Director of Immigration but then the Ramadan schedules started to take toll on me and I became rusty. The urge to write rekindled yesterday when I was at the same Gidan Dawa Cemetery at the instance of one of my friends whose wife died and was buried at the grave yard at about 3pm, thursday afternoon.

I was in the company of about 4 people waiting for the corpse to be interred, some grave yard discussions ensued. I always hated discussions during interment but sometimes you can’t help being drag in to it. One elderly person at the site was a loquacious but seemed knowledgeable opined that cemeteries are grossly inadequate in Katsina but he was swiftly interjected by one other person near me who I later found to be a very senior land officer from the Ministry of lands. He gave us a complete run down of the grave yards in the city and we all agreed that the number of the grave yards in the city is sufficient even with the high frequency of death.  Another person nearby sounded so sarcastic suggested that the frequency at which people die in Katsina is occasioned by PDP maladministration that subject the citizenry into abject poverty. No medicines in our hospitals despite the lies that have been going round on certain category of people receiving free medicines, no portable drinking water, no food, no nothing! But I was not interested in those PDP escapades as the internment was rounded up with individual prayers for the repose of the dead and for the bereaved the fortitude to bear the loss. We went out of the cemetery just like we came in, minding our steps so as not to put your feet on certain graves. This is so because the graves are jam parked and clustered together. There is no any form of planning as graves are dug according to the availability of the space. Most of the times bereaved families spend a large chunk of time looking for available space to bury their dead. This is even more difficult if you have to bury a corpse in the night. My aunt died about two weeks ago as we were about to break our fast but for reasons best known to my uncles we had to bury her that night.  We therefore trooped to the new Dantakum grave yard at about 9 pm with more than half of us holding different types of  lamps and torch lights of different shapes and sizes  and of course of different illuminations. We really had a difficult time as we had to go with virtually everything and most important we spent considerable amount of time fretting for a space to dig the grave because it is not just readily available. This is not good enough.

As it is now, the 3 major cemeteries in the city namely Danmarna, Dantakum and the new Dantakuma near the general hospital are full to the brim as such new ones must be opened and in order to have organised cemeteries the following measures must be put into consideration:  A Cemetery management committee be set by the State government and be charged with the responsibility of managing the grave yards we have all over the state or local government as the case may be. The employment of skilled labourers for the preparation of graves this is not only to ensure that graves are dug in the correct location and at the correct shapes and depth, but also to relieve bereaved family of having to dig the grave for a recently dead relative. The new cemetery must be designed in such a way that even motor vehicle could pass through the grave yard without marching the graves and footpaths properly delineated. The graves are to be designed in such an order that will portray planning and orderliness, a systematic layout of graves in rows so that in the event that it is full we can start from the beginning and re- use the graves without the fear of having to come through fresh one.  Some facilities such as bore wells, pails and buckets, some digging implements, flood lights, cemetery registers must be provided. I think the onus now lies with the State Government to let us have this one. Let this one be a legacy the PDP will bequeath to us.