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THERE aren't many places in the world where you end up in a cot when
you're dead and buried. But in Avalon Cemetery in Soweto there are
thousands of cots demarcating graves.
Avalon Cemetery in Soweto
The custom comes from Mpumalanga where traditionally, rocky
soil meant that graves could not be dug very deep, and rocks were
placed over them to prevent animals from digging up the bodies. To
reinforce this effort, metal rectangular cots were positioned over the
graves.
So when you drive along the dusty roads of the 172-hectare
Avalon Cemetery you'll see thousands of cots across the cemetery that
has some 200 000 graves.
The cots pose a problem for the maintenance of the graves. Alan Buff,
acting general manager of cemeteries and crematoria at City Parks,
says: "The by-laws don't allow for these cots, most of which are rusted
and falling to pieces, but their presence means we can't clear out
weeds or mow the grass."
This means that the cemetery has a very untidy, unkempt
appearance but this will soon change. In the coming weeks the Cemetery
will be transformed by the planting of 3 000 4-metre high indigenous
trees, and the tarring of the roads.
This is in preparation for tours of the cemetery by World
Summit delegates, who will also be given a chance to plant some of
those trees.
City Parks is encouraging families in Soweto to use headstones on
graves, as the graves are safely dug two metres down. "A traditional
marble headstone is too expensive, so we have suggested concrete
headstones that are refined and buffed to look like marble. They go at
R200-R300," says Buff. Metal markers placed in granite are being used
now, and they are "catching on", says Buff.
Avalon is a busy place on weekends, when around 200 funerals
take place on Saturdays and Sundays, with hearses and buses entering
the Cemetery in a constant stream, bringing coffins and thousands of
mourners.
Helen Joseph's grave in Avalon Cemetary
There are long-term plans to create a Heroes Acre at Avalon,
taking in some of the freedom struggle heroes who are already buried
there - Communist Party leader and Housing Minister in South Africa's
first democratic government, Joe Slovo; 1976 Soweto hero Hector
Pieterson; human rights stalwart Helen Joseph; Rivonia triallists Elias
Motsoaledi and Andrew Mlangeni, and others.
There are also long-term plans to bring back the remains of
hundreds of black South Africans who drowned when their ship sank
during the First World War. On 21 February 1917, the SS Mendi hit
another ship and sank off France, with 823 troops of the South African
Native Labour Corps on board. Some 616 of them died. Long-term plans
are to bring these men back home, to be buried at Avalon. A memorial to
the soldiers has been erected at the cemetery, and will be part of the
tour.
Similarly, there is to be an area of high profile created at
another of Johannesburg's cemeteries, Westpark, in the northern
suburbs. So far several people of high profile have been buried in this
section of the cemetery - 11-year-old Aids victim Nkosi Johnson, the
victims of the tragic Westdene Dam bus accident, and former Minister of
Foreign Affairs Alfred Nzo.
Around 200 funerals take place on Saturdays and Sundays in Avalon Cemetary
The city's cemeteries
The first cemetery in
the city was on the corner of Bree and Harrison Streets, laid out in
1886 when gold was discovered on the Witwatersrand. This became overrun
as the town grew briskly and land was acquired in Braamfontein for the
Braamfontein Cemetery, which received its first burials in 1888. The
bodies from the city cemetery were exhumed and removed to Braamfontein
in the 1890s.
There were private farm cemeteries at several locations around the
city - Alberts Farm, north-west of the city, Bezuidenhout Valley, east
of the city, and Klipriviersberg, down south. Most of these are still
in place.
In 1912 the Brixton Cemetery was opened, barely a kilometre
west of the Braamfontein Cemetery. Both cemeteries reflect the city's
history, with Randlords, miners, engineers, soldiers, geologists and
mayors finding their final resting place in them.
In 1918 a wood-burning crematorium was built in the Brixton Cemetery,
on land organised by Mahatma Gandhi. In 1956 a gas-fired crematorium
was built alongside the old crematorium and its chapel, and this will
undergo renovation in preparation for the cemeteries tour.
Recently, after a year-long search, Enoch Sontonga's grave was
located at Braamfontein Cemetery, and the man who wrote South Africa's
anthem is remembered with an impressive granite cube.
The Kliprivierberg Cemetery, south of the city, contains the
victims of one of many concentration camps set up during the Anglo Boer
War. The Cemetery contains 700 graves. In all, 5 000 men, women and
children were interned in a camp at the Turffontein Race Course.
In 1920 the Nancefield Cemetery in Soweto opened, followed by
the Doornkop Cemetery in the 1930s. In 1972 the Avalon Cemetery opened,
and at its present rate of burials, it has a lifespan of 10 years. In
2001 there were 9 500 burials at the Cemetery, around 800 a month, and
100 hectares have so far been used up.
The City is planning a heritage tour of three cemeteries - Braamfontein, Brixton and Avalon.
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