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In Pictures: Indian man cremates COVID-19 victims despite stigma

Facing infection and stigma, Ramananda Sarkar lights funeral pyres at crematorium in Assam dedicated to the virus dead.

Smoke envelops Ramananda Sarkar, 43, as he cremates bodies of COVID-19 victims in Assam state. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Smoke envelops Ramananda Sarkar, 43, as he cremates bodies of COVID-19 victims in Assam state. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
5 Oct 2020
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Ramananda Sarkar never wanted to burn bodies for a living, but he was deep in debt and desperate for money.

The 43-year-old had fled his remote village in India’s northeastern Assam state after failing to pay back a loan he had taken to start selling sugarcane juice on a wooden cart. But even in the state’s main city of Guwahati, Sarkar had trouble finding work.

Two years ago, he walked onto a cremation ground in the city and took up the job of lighting the funeral pyres.

While Hindus believe cremation rites are sacred and release the dead person’s soul from the cycle of rebirth, those who actually deal with corpses are looked down upon since the work has historically been carried out by the less privileged castes.

That has given the job a stigma only made worse by the coronavirus, which has killed more than 100,000 people out of 6.6 million reported infections in India.

Sarkar thought he had come to terms with his reputation, finally telling his wife what his job was after hiding it for some time. But in early May, he took part in what he thought was a routine cremation, not knowing that the woman had died of COVID-19.

When people learned the woman had been a victim of the disease, Sarkar’s acquaintances started shunning him and the state authorities put him under quarantine for a few days. But they let him out as there was no one available to do his job at the cremation ground.

“I don’t understand why people hate me. Only because I burn the dead bodies?” Sarkar asked. “If I don’t do this, then who will?”

Sarkar now works at a special cremation ground that local authorities designated just for victims of the pandemic.

With a mask on his face and a prayer on his lips, he cremates bodies brought in by a handful of relatives in protective suits – hurried affairs conducted with minimal rituals under the state government’s guidelines.

Assam state has reported more than 181,600 confirmed cases of the virus since the pandemic began, and 711 deaths. Sarkar said he alone has cremated more than 450 COVID-19 victims.

Despite his vital community service, Sarkar’s own life continues to worsen. When his landlord heard what he did for work, he asked him to move out. A district official arranged a hotel room for him.

Sarkar was also stopped from returning to his village to visit his family, first by the village head and then, after local authorities intervened on his behalf, by the villagers themselves.

After more than a month of not seeing his wife and three sons, Sarkar recently snuck into his village in the middle of a rainy night. He called out to his family from the road outside his house and was able to spend 15 minutes with them and leave them some money.

“I don’t want my sons to become cremators like me,” Sarkar said. “I want them to go to school and become good human beings and earn respect from the society, not like me who has to meet his family in the dark.”

On his way back to the city, Sarkar says he decided to stop at a nearby temple to rest, but was told to leave by the temple officials.

He made it back to the cremation grounds and said despite the personal cost – which includes the risk of infection – he will continue to light the funeral pyres of those who have lost their lives to the virus and he will honour them as best as he can.

“I may die of COVID-19, but I don’t care,” he said. “I will do my work sincerely till the end.”

Sarkar makes an offering to Hindu goddess Kali before cremating the body of a COVID-19 victim. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar makes an offering to Hindu goddess Kali before cremating the body of a COVID-19 victim. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
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Two years ago, Sarkar walked into a cremation ground in Guwahati and took up the job of lighting the funeral pyres. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Two years ago, Sarkar walked into a cremation ground in Guwahati and took up the job of lighting the funeral pyres. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
While Hindus believe cremation rites are sacred and release the dead person's soul from the cycle of rebirth, those who actually deal with corpses are looked down upon. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
While Hindus believe cremation rites are sacred and release the dead person's soul from the cycle of rebirth, those who actually deal with corpses are looked down upon. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
The stigma around the men lighting funeral pyres has been made worse by the coronavirus. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
The stigma around the men lighting funeral pyres has been made worse by the coronavirus. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar works at a special cremation ground that local authorities designated just for victims of the pandemic. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar works at a special cremation ground that local authorities designated just for victims of the pandemic. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar's wife and children stand by the door of their house in a remote village in Assam. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar's wife and children stand by the door of their house in a remote village in Assam. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
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Sarkar says he was stopped from returning to his village to visit his family by the villagers. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
Sarkar says he was stopped from returning to his village to visit his family by the villagers. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
After a month of not seeing his family, Sarkar snuck into his village in the middle of a rainy night. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]
After a month of not seeing his family, Sarkar snuck into his village in the middle of a rainy night. [Anupam Nath/AP Photo]

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