‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (2024)

Bradford, United Kingdom – In 2013, Jusna Begum performed ghusl, for the first time.

Her sister Halima had died from cancer at 40, and in accordance with Muslim principles, she washed her sibling’s body one last time, with water, before laying her to rest.

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As the United Kingdom struggles to contain another devastating wave of the coronavirus, Begum, 46, along with a team of volunteers, has been working across East London to ensure the last rites of a mostly South Asian Muslim community are observed.

The first national lockdown implemented last March saw mosques across the country close, leaving funeral directors and volunteers initially uncertain over whether they could safely practise traditional burying rites.

“We weren’t able to perform ghusl initially,” Begum said. “It meant many of the dead were buried in body bags, in the clothes that they came in.”

The restrictions have since relaxed, allowing volunteers to bathe the dead while respecting social distancing restrictions and wearing full PPE – bodysuits, hoods, masks and gloves.

Meanwhile, the death rate has been unrelenting.

“There’s been a drastic change from the first wave. Now the dead are getting younger and younger,” said Begum, recalling a recent case – a mother in her 30s of Bangladeshi descent who had died from coronavirus whose three children face being put into care, while her husband fights for his life.

Rituals upended

There is little fanfare with Muslim funerals.

Loved ones wash the dead and clean their hair with water – a final earthly act of affection.

The deceased are shrouded in a white kaffan, a sheet made of cotton. It is a symbol – in death, there is no difference between the rich and the poor.

Then, community prayers are offered at a mosque for the janazah, or funeral.

Begum, who also heads a domestic violence charity, East End Project, helped bathe the Muslim victims of the Grenfell Tower fire in 2017.

But the catastrophes of the pandemic are unlike anything she has seen before.

In South Asian culture, elders usually guide the young on how to carry out these traditions, but many have been forced to shield, leaving it to younger volunteers like Begum to take the helm.

Gold wedding bangles that adorn the wrists of elderly South Asian women, gifted to them as brides, normally become treasured keepsakes after death. But for some, the sudden death of the virus has meant these sentimental objects are now saddled with premature grief.

“Recently, I told a family to take their mother’s bangles off; she had COVID-19 and she was dying,” said Begum. “But her daughter didn’t have the courage to [do it]. [To her] it was like saying goodbye while she was still alive.”

Surrounded by virus victims for almost a year, Begum has not been infected, but her family has suffered immensely.

On October 15, her elder sister Monwara, 56, who already had cancer, died from COVID-19. On December 18, her brother Abdul Kodor, 60, also died from coronavirus after an outbreak at the family home which left their mother hospitalised.

Working round the clock has not allowed Begum to properly grieve.

“But it’s [taken] a toll on my mum,” she said.

‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (1)

Funeral services overwhelmed

In the UK, more than 135,000 people have passed away with COVID-19 on their death certificates since the start of the pandemic.

Britain’s ethnic minorities, particularly those of Bangladeshi, Black Caribbean or Pakistani origin, have been disproportionately affected in terms of exposure to the virus – with some communities witnessing far higher rates of hospitalisation and deaths.

In August last year, Public Health England found that in the first wave, people of Bangladeshi descent were twice as likely to die from COVID-19 than white Britons, while people of Indian and Pakistani origin were between 10 and 50 percent more likely to die.

According to a February report by the Office for National Statistics, “There was a reduction of COVID-19 mortality during the second wave of the pandemic in most of the ethnic groups, while the higher rates continued in men and women from Bangladeshi and Pakistani background.”

At the Muslim Funeral Service, a funeral parlour in Bradford, a northern city with a large Pakistani population, calls come in as early as 1am bearing news of another body.

“Overwhelmed would be an understatement,” said Sajid Munir, who works for the family business. “On average, we were doing 16-hour shifts. We start at 7:30 in the morning and we do not come out of the office until 10:30 in the evening.”

Munir’s uncle Haji Gul Rashid, the company’s co-founder who oversaw thousands of funerals in Bradford for more than 27 years, died on April 10 last year aged 68, in the middle of the first lockdown.

“For him to have 10 people at his funeral, that was heart-wrenching,” said Munir.

‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (2)

Isolated in grief

In the middle of December, Razwan Faraz’s father, 67-year-old Gul Faraz, a much-loved taxi driver from the English midlands city of Birmingham, developed mild cold symptoms.

Faraz, who has Pakistani ancestry, called an ambulance for Gul when he began having trouble breathing.

“[My parents] were self-isolating. The only place they went to was the supermarket,” he said. “My father was very active, very healthy. I hardly ever saw him eat processed [or] fried foods.”

But Gul was immediately hospitalised at Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Two days later, his breathing deteriorated and he was placed on a ventilator.

“He was [still] conscious,” said Faraz. “He rang my mum and he said, ‘It’s going to be OK. Don’t worry.’”

Towards the end of the year, Gul fell into a coma when Faraz was himself was just recovering from coronavirus.

Gul died on January 16.

Days later, Faraz was looking through his late father’s belongings when he stumbled across 11 pairs of the same slippers and an excessive amount of hair dye.

Weeks earlier, his mother, Parveen Akhter Faraz, had asked Gul to buy a pair of the style of slippers she was comfortable with, afraid would be discontinued, and to replenish her dwindling supply of hair dye.

“He had purchased a whole year’s [supply] of hair dye for my mum,” said Faraz. “He was besotted with her right until the end.”

‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (3)

Strict social distancing restrictions have altered Muslim funerals, a traditionally communal event often attended by hundreds of people.

From handshakes to tight embraces, the pandemic has taken away the little solace physical touch can give those who are grieving.

After the doctors told Faraz’s family Gul was passing away, Parveen refused to hug her children.

“She was so paranoid, she didn’t want to give anyone COVID-19,” said Faraz.

But Faraz is relieved that unlike many, he, his three brothers and his uncle were able to wash Gul’s body – a “life-changing” process, he says.

“My brothers and I really got to feel through our grief just as brothers,” he said.

“But not being able to share that grief with cousins’ aunts and uncles, people that we are close to. I found that genuinely difficult.”

‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (4)
‘Now the dead are getting younger and younger’ (2024)

FAQs

How old does the Bible say you will be in heaven? ›

“But do not let this one fact escape your notice beloved, that with the Lord one day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years like one day,” (2 Peter 3:8, NASB). Heaven is an eternal place that exists in another dimension of time and space that we do not have access to; nor do we have intimate knowledge of.

What is Matthew chapter 2 verse 20? ›

20: "Arise and take the young child. and his mother, and go into the. land of Israel, for those who sought. the young child's life are dead."

Which verse says there is no connection between the dead and the living? ›

Ecclesiastes 9:4-10 clearly rejects the notion of communion or interaction between the living and the dead when it states that " ... the dead do not know anything, nor have they any longer a reward, for their memory is forgotten.

Why do you seek the living among the dead scripture? ›

Luke 24:4-8 The Message (MSG)

The men said, “Why are you looking for the Living One in a cemetery? He is not here, but raised up. Remember how he told you when you were still back in Galilee that he had to be handed over to sinners, be killed on a cross, and in three days rise up?” Then they remembered Jesus' words.

How many years does God say we will live? ›

When mankind had become corrupted in the period preceding the flood, God said: 'My spirit shall not abide in man for ever, for he is flesh; his days shall be a hundred and twenty years' (Gen. 6:3). Ancient interpreters, both Jews and Christians, did not agree about the interpretation of these words.

How soon after death do you go to heaven? ›

We enter heaven immediately upon our death, or our souls sleep until the second coming of Christ and the accompanying resurrection. Most have chosen to believe what the Bible appears to overwhelmingly propose: our souls (spirits) penetrate heaven immediately after we take our final breath.

What does the Bible say about cremation? ›

There's nothing in the Bible or in church history to suggest that Christians should cremate, but is there anything to suggest that they shouldn't? Christians have made the case that there's certainly nothing wrong with the practice. Some have said that, just as we are destined to go “from dust to dust” (Gen.

What does the Bible say about leaving the dead alone? ›

This is one of the doctrines of Christ. And all doctrines of Christ, are not His doct-rines, but the doctrines of God, His Father, that sent Him into the world. (John 7:16.).

Why does the Bible say not to touch the dead? ›

Whoever touches the dead body of anyone and fails to purify himself defiles the LORD's tabernacle. That person must be cut off from Israel. Because the water of cleansing has not been sprinkled on him, he is unclean; his uncleanness remains on him.

What does the Bible say about a dead person? ›

Then I heard a voice from heaven say, “Write this: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.” “Yes,” says the Spirit, “they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them.” “Do not let your hearts be troubled. You believe in God; believe also in me.

What does the Bible say about the reality of death? ›

For the believer in Jesus, death is nothing but a gateway between life and life.” As the apostle Paul put it, for the person who trusts and follows Jesus, death is nothing scarier than being “at home with the Lord” (2 Cor. 5:8).

What does the Bible say is the purpose of death? ›

Death is the start of eternity in God's presence.

1 Thessalonians 5:9-10 reminds us, “For God did not appoint us to wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us, that whether we wake or sleep, we should live together with Him.”

Who will enter heaven according to the Bible verses? ›

In Matthew 7:21–23, Jesus is recorded as saying: “Not everyone who says to Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven.

What age does God start judging you? ›

Specific ages

This includes seven in the Catholic Church, and eight in Mormonism. Other people put the age of accountability at 12 (since that was the age at which Jesus began to demonstrate his understanding of right and wrong) or 13 (the age of the Jewish Bar Mitzvah).

How Old Testament people go to heaven? ›

These Christians believe when Christ preached to spirits in prison (1 Peter 3:19) between his death and resurrection is when Christ announced the Old Testament saints were then forgiven and so could go to paradise.

Is going to heaven mentioned in the Old Testament? ›

Our view that you die and your soul goes to heaven or hell is not found anywhere in the Old Testament, and it's not what Jesus preached.

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