Where shall we bury our beloved?
Post
|April 23, 2025
BURIALS and cremations are private affairs where family members and friends of the deceased gather to intern a beloved person. They are embedded in religious practices, traditions and norms wherein the internment or cremation of a deceased is seen as a sacred duty.
In Lenasia as elsewhere in South Africa, while the sacred dominated the burial of deceased persons within families, it was overshadowed by the racial policies of successive white governments.
Since 1950, due to the racialised nature of human settlements in Johannesburg under apartheid, burials of persons from different racial groups took place in racially-designated cemeteries. This became the norm particularly after the passing of the Group Areas Act.
Added to this is the demarcation of cemeteries into different sections based on religious identity.
Prior to the introduction of apartheid policy in 1948, residents living in Johannesburg and surrounds, including Indians, buried their deceased in different sections of the Braamfontein, Roodepoort, Newclare and Kliptown cemeteries.
These cemeteries had developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, after the discovery of gold on the Reef, and consequent influx of miners and speculators into the fast-growing tent-town that Johannesburg had become.
Before that burials were on privately-owned farms such as Alberts Farm, Bezuidenhout Valley and Klipriviersberg. Other private cemeteries also arose under the control of churches, hospitals and mines. Historically, cremations were done at the Hindu Crematorium in Brixton in Johannesburg, which is on the doorstep of Vrededorp.
This was established in 1918, due to the campaign for a crematorium by the Transvaal Indian Congress and Tamil Benefit Society leader, Thambi Naidoo, who incidentally is the grandfather of veteran Lenasia ANC leader, Prema Naidoo. This was a wood-burning crematorium, which is now declared a national monument. In 1956, a gas-fired crematorium was built alongside the old crematorium and its chapel, which is still used presently.
The Muslim section of the cemetery is located a few kilometres away at the Braamfontein Cemetery, opposite the University of the Witwatersrand.
このストーリーは、Post の April 23, 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Post からのその他のストーリー
Post
Messi thrills India with final lap of honour
FOOTBALL superstar Lionel Messi ended his whirlwind tour of India on Monday with a lap of honour in New Delhi, thrilling thousands of fans and thanking them for \"all the love and support\".
2 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
Calum Scott returns to SA for his biggest tour yet
MULTI-PLATINUM selling singer/ songwriter Calum Scott first toured Mzansi in 2018 in support of his Only Human album.
1 min
December 17, 2025
Post
Bollywood star sends special message to SA fans ahead of Christmas release
RED SEA FESTIVAL
1 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
Why our beloved bunny chow never returned to India
WHENEVER
1 min
December 17, 2025
Post
Green's record deal sparks debate over best role
AUSTRALIA all-rounder Cameron Green made headlines yesterday after being roped in by Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) for a record R46 million at the IPL 2026 auction, held at the Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi.
2 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
Wrapping up 2025: a criminological lens
AS 2025 draws to a close, South Africa confronts a complex and often grim criminal landscape.
6 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
A visionary for unity and mankind
VICK Panday, founder of the New Ahobilam Temple of Protection, was a visionary whose dream stretched beyond bricks and mortar, said his cousin, Viresh Panday.
1 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
Aditi on mom's life in December: 'Christmas, New Year deadlines, everything at once'
TELEVISION actress Aditi Malikk has opened up about the year-end hustle that every mother can relate to.
1 min
December 17, 2025
Post
When children vanish: why 'running away' with adults is a warning we cannot ignore
INTERNALISING SHAME
4 mins
December 17, 2025
Post
Finding warmth in the lonely festive season
FOR many, the festive season is synonymous with joy, laughter and family gatherings.
2 mins
December 17, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

