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香港墓地短缺日益嚴(yán)重

所屬教程:英語(yǔ)漫讀

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2015年03月14日

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Hong Kong, one of the most densely packed spotson the planet, is running out of places to bury itsdead — leaving thousands of corpses either in limboor in six-year resting plots before being exhumedand cremated.

作為地球上人口最密集的地區(qū)之一,香港用來(lái)埋葬逝者的地方即將耗盡。成千上萬(wàn)的逝者要么找不到地方安葬,要么先臨時(shí)葬在某個(gè)安息地、六年后再挖出來(lái)火化。

The territory, home to 8m people on a tiny spit ofland, epitomises the twin problems of land scarcityand an ageing population. Deaths each year haverisen from about 25,000 three decades ago to more than 43,000 in 2013.

這塊有著800萬(wàn)人口的彈丸之地深受兩個(gè)問(wèn)題的困擾:土地稀缺與人口老齡化。2013年,香港每年的人口死亡數(shù)已由30年前的2.5萬(wàn)左右增加至逾4.3萬(wàn)。

“We have 20,000-30,000 urns of ashes in this area right now,” said Betsy Ma, a funeral parlourdirector. “This is our responsibility. After the ceremony where do they put [them]? Thegovernment cannot provide enough space.”

“我們這里現(xiàn)在有2萬(wàn)至3萬(wàn)甕骨灰,”一家殯儀館的主管Betsy Ma稱(chēng),“這是我們的責(zé)任。葬禮結(jié)束后骨灰放在哪?政府無(wú)法提供足夠的地方。”

Undertakers keep the ashes at the back of their shops until a permanent resting space isfound. This means the deceased also spend longer in funeral-parlour limbo, depriving families ofa dignified resting place for their loved ones. Bills are rising too, fittingly for a place where theliving also pay some of the highest prices in the world for shoebox-sized apartments.

殯儀人員只能把逝者的骨灰臨時(shí)存放在殯儀館后面,直到它們找到一個(gè)永久的安放地。這意味著逝者在殯儀管暫時(shí)停放的時(shí)間里,逝者的家人無(wú)法為他們所愛(ài)的人找到一個(gè)有尊嚴(yán)的安息地。費(fèi)用也在增加,對(duì)于一個(gè)就連活人都在為住上鞋盒大小的公寓支付世界上最昂貴居住費(fèi)用的地方而言,這種情況倒也合情合理。

The Chinese territory’s Food, Environment and Hygiene Department is debating more thandoubling the cost of burial to HK$6,670 (US$860) in order to “recover the full cost of providingthe relevant goods and services”.

中國(guó)香港特別行政區(qū)食物環(huán)境衛(wèi)生署(Food, Environment and Hygiene Department)正在討論將安葬費(fèi)用提高逾一倍至6670港元(合860美元),以便“收回提供相關(guān)物品和服務(wù)的全部成本”。

Bills are swelling even for those who choose the more space-efficient niches of the city’scolumbariums, giant locker-like repositories in which ashes are kept. There are proposals tomore than double the price of keeping an urn in a niche from HK$140 to HK$345. Thegovernment has responded by building more public columbariums, two of which added almost25,000 spaces last June.

即使對(duì)于那些選擇香港骨灰龕場(chǎng)更節(jié)省空間的壁龕的人,費(fèi)用也在上漲。骨灰龕場(chǎng)是存放骨灰的、如巨型寄存柜般的貯存庫(kù)。有人建議將骨灰龕位的費(fèi)用由140港元增加逾一倍至345港元。為應(yīng)對(duì)這一問(wèn)題,香港政府正在建造更多的公共骨灰龕場(chǎng),去年6月有兩家龕場(chǎng)增加了將近2.5萬(wàn)個(gè)龕位。

Applications for columbarium niches almost doubled to 23,235 between 2010 and 2014, withthe average waiting time increasing from two and a half years to four and a half. While waitingfor a permanent resting place, it costs HK$80 a month to keep ashes in temporary storagefacilities.

2010年至2014年間,骨灰龕位的申請(qǐng)數(shù)量幾乎增加了一倍至23235個(gè),每個(gè)申請(qǐng)的平均等待時(shí)間由兩年半增加至四年半。在等待永久安放地期間,骨灰停放在臨時(shí)貯存設(shè)施的費(fèi)用為每月80港元。

Sage International, the Hong Kong-listed funeral services group that is Ms Ma’s employer, hasstarted to encourage its clients to use an alternative way to commemorate their loved ones— turning their ashes into gemstones.

仁智國(guó)際(Sage International)是一家在香港上市的殯葬服務(wù)集團(tuán),Betsy Ma便是該集團(tuán)的員工。該集團(tuán)已開(kāi)始鼓勵(lì)其顧客采用另一種方式紀(jì)念他們所愛(ài)的人——把其骨灰轉(zhuǎn)變?yōu)殂@石。

Ms Ma said a few hundred customers each year choose this glittering way to commemorate thedeceased. She has even used the service herself. “This is my father,” she said, pointing at thestone in her earring.

Betsy Ma稱(chēng),每年有數(shù)百名顧客選擇用這種“閃閃發(fā)光”的方式來(lái)紀(jì)念逝者。就連她自己也選擇了這種服務(wù)。“這是我父親,”她指著自己耳環(huán)上的鉆石說(shuō)。


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