In Venezuela, Even Death May Not Bring Peace

Bougainvillea shade the pathways at the Cementerio General del Sur, where the mausoleums of statesmen and movie stars stand next to the graves of aristocrats and thousands of commoners. Sculpted lions gaze down from sepulchers. Elegance, not anarchy, once defined this resting place.

No longer.

Now, crypts for once-feared military rulers have been ransacked. Coffins, twisted open with crowbars, lie strewn under samán trees. Cages with padlocked gates surround the burial sites of some families, as if that might protect them from a disturbing reality: not even Caracas’s city of the dead is safe.

Accompanying Venezuela’s soaring levels of murders and kidnappings, its cemeteries are the setting for a new kind of crime wave. Grave robbers are looting them for human bones, answering demand from some practitioners of a fast-growing transplanted Cuban religion called Palo that uses the bones in its ceremonies.

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Posted in * Christian Life / Church Life, * International News & Commentary, Death / Burial / Funerals, Parish Ministry, South America, Venezuela

One comment on “In Venezuela, Even Death May Not Bring Peace

  1. Just Passing By says:

    Greetings.

    I looked up “Palo” on [url=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palo_(religion)”]Wikipedia[/url], and discovered that there were cases of grave-robbing so as to use the bones in Palo rituals in New Jersey in [b][url=”http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110002598″]2002[/url][/b]. The piece is from the opinion section, but cites hard facts, which I assume can be verified independently.

    regards,

    JPB