Funerals in the Digital Age: Navigating Technology Beyond Traditional Practices

 
 
 
IIZ 2015 WINTER SCHOOL
 
THEME: “INSURANCE IN A DIGITAL
WORLD – THE TIME IS NOW”
 
TOPIC: BEYOND THE FUNERAL HOME:
FUNERALS IN AN AGE OF TECHNOLOGY
 
PRESENTER: DR C MAKINA
 
1
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
 
CONTENTS
 
1.
QUOTES
2.
FUNNY HUMOUR
3.
INTRODUCTION
4.
VARIOUS TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES
5.
CONCLUSION
 
2
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
3
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
4
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
2.  F/H
 
5
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
6
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
7
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
8
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
3. INTRODUCTION
-
When we face the tragedy of death, we look to
family and friends to shepherd us through the
difficult time.  Some give spiritual guidance others
help us navigate the strange and delicate logistics.
In fact “death care” or what we do with the
deceased, dates back to the beginnings of human
life.  We find it in the bible and we find it being
done by the ancient Egyptians.
 
9
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
-
In modern times, funeral directors do more than
simply prepare the body.  They co-ordinate and
organise burial needs, such as securing a hearse
and coffin, and plan the viewing and graveside
services.  When someone dies grieving family and
friends also need a caring professional, and an
efficient administrator to handle documents we do
not think about in our everyday lives.
-
Since funeral directors enter our lives at such
stressful times, they need a compassion, respect
 
10
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
and knowledge of different customs, rituals and
traditions – a delicate balance of a business – like
efficiency and an emotional strength and support,
all without treading on the boundaries of families
during an often tumultuous time.
 
A funeral is not like a wedding, a wedding is
complex – but with the wedding you have more
than a year to do it – When there is a death, there
is only a week or less to plan for it.
 
11
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
 
 
4. VARIOUS TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES
 
Living Headstones use technology to honour the
dead. (A Seattle Monument maker affixes a small
QR or quick response code like a bar code, but
square to the tombstone.  A smart phone with the
right application lets visitors read the person’s life
history online.
 
12
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
 
13
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
SOCIAL MEDIA
1)  We now have websites where families are enabled to
collaborate and plan online, while keeping the Funeral
Provider up to date with their wishes.  These days
people are dispersed in the diaspora etc and it can be
difficult to communicate but this online planning
helps. People can also plan their own funerals.  Clients
can keep track of all the arrangements.  People can
also plan for the end of their lives from wills to
funerals. People have to make informed decisions, not
“distress purchases”
 
14
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
 
 
2) Social media is now an integral part of the story
when it comes to technology affecting a community
after someone’s passing.  Online friends are taking on
the task of keeping the deceased’s network alive by
posting to their facebook wall, sharing personal photos
and reminiscing about old times.  Someone’s account
can stay open indefinately through, the contribution of
friends and family members and can serve as a living
and changing tribute.
 
15
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
Digital Filing
Its now possible to store important digital files,
family photos and wills in remote cloud servers.
Perhaps the most far-fetched, yet not impossible
idea doing the rounds is the idea of holography.
Hologram technology offers a 3D likeness that can
move and speak as if the person were really
present.  Its expensive for the average person and
also the technology has not yet come full circle, it
is possible that in the future individuals will
 
16
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
record a personalised hologram message that can
be delivered to their families and friends after they
pass away.
Telephone
The telephone used to be the first point of contract
when a death occurred but now people operate
with cellphones and computers.  We now live in an
age where people send photos and authorizations
to the funeral home from their smartphones and
use text or whatsapp to communicate with an
 
17
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
Ever-widening circle of contacts.  Technology
reduces stress for the bereaved family.  While we
criticise e-mail and texting for being impersonal, in
the case of death, that nature allows us to delay or
contemplate difficult details, when we are ready –
on our own time, in our own private space.
Texting is more convenient for grieving members
and funeral homes alike, provided the Funeral
Director has asked for permission to do so and
usually families have permitted Funeral Directors
 
18
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
Funeral directors to use it.  People who use
technology regularly and are comfortable with it
are easier to move into that kind of relationship.
 
Live Streaming
Online Funerals are on the rise. Families in the
Diaspora who cannot travel to the funeral can
watch live streaming of a Funeral in progress
online on a password protected website.
 
 
19
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
USE OF AGGREGATORS
This is a website portal or search utility to enable a
client to gain several quotes via an electronic e-
quote form.  The insurance aggregator concludes
agreements with a number of Insurers to provide a
comparative quote based on pre-determined list of
specified needs as disclosed by potential clients.  In
Zimbabwe Zimselector is a recent addition to the
aggregators found all over the developed and
developing countries.
 
20
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
Internationally there has been a significant
increase in the amount of Insurance contracts
concluded via the internet.
 
OTHER BURIAL ALTERNATIVES
RESOMATION
-
Dissolving of tissues as an alternative to
traditional cremation.  The process called
resomation or bio-cremation – uses heated water
and potassium hydroxide to liquify the body,
leaving only bones behind.  The bones are then
pulverized, much as in regular cremation and
fragments returned to family. This process
eliminates the carbon footprints that cremation
leaves behind.
 
21
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
-
Cremation releases carbon dioxide as well as trace
chemicals such as mercury from dental filling.
ETERNAL REEFS
-
For those who prefer to nourish a more aquatic
environment after death there is the Eternal Reef
option.  Eternal Reefs create artificial reef material
out of a mixture of concrete and human remains.
These heavy concrete orbs are then placed in areas
where reefs need restoration, attracting fish and
other organisms that turn the remains into an
 
22
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
an undersea habitat.
CRYONICS
And then there are those who want to hang on to
their old life.  Cryonics is the process of freezing a
person’s body in the hopes that later medical
science will make it possible to revive them,
personality and memory intact.  There were just
over 200 people in Cryonics in the USA as of
August 2011.  Prices vary depending on the
procedure, preservation company and payment
 
23
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
plan, but can range as high as $200 000 for whole
body preservation.
SPACE BURIAL
-
Your ashes can be shot into space by a rocket.
According to Celetis Memorial space flights a
company that offers the postmortem flights, a low
orbit journey that lets your (remains experience
zero gravity before return to each starts at $995. A
chance to orbit Earth and eventually burn up in
the atmosphere runs around $3 000. Dedicated
 
24
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
space lovers can have themselves launched to the
moon or into deep space for $10 000 and
$12 000USD respectively.
 
MUMMIFICATION
It is not just for ancient Egyptions price of human
mummification starts at $63 000USD.  They hope
their preserved DNA will enable future scientists to
clone them and give them (at least their genes) a
second shot at life.
 
25
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
PLASTINATION
- Much like mummification, plastination involves
preserving the body in a semi-recognizable form.  It
was invented by scientist Gunther Von Hagens.
Plastination is used in medical schools and
anatomy labs to preserve organ specimens for
education.  But Von Hagens has taken the process
further creating exhibits of plastinated bodies
posed as if frozen in the midst of their everyday
activities.
 
26
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
According to the Institute of plastination,
thousands have signed up to donate their bodies
for education and display.
 
FREEZE DRYING
- The newest comer on the eco-burial stage is a
process called Promession, or put more plainly
freeze-drying.  The process involves immersing the
corpse in liquid nitrogen, which makes it very
brittle.  Vibrations shake the body apart and the
 
27
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
water is evaporated away in a special vacuum
chamber.  Next, a separator filters out any mercury
fillings or surgical implants and the powdered
remains are laid to rest in a shallow grave. With a
shallow burial oxygen and water can mix with the
powdered remains, turning them into compost.
GREEN BURIAL
Green or natural burial is a way of caring for the
dead with minimal environmental impact that aids
in the conservation of natural resources,
 
28
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
Resources, reduction of carbon emissions
protection of worker health and the restoration
and /or preservation of habitat.  Green burial
necessitates the use of non-toxic and bio-
degradable materials, such as caskets, shroud
and urns.
CONCLUSION
The examples above demonstrate how technology
is already reshaping the funeral landscape, as we
know it.
 
29
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
 
As technology becomes more firmly embeded into
our culture.  I am sure we will see it revolutionize
our death care rituals and our whole concept of
death and memorialization
.
 
30
 
DR CHOMI MAKINA
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Explore the intersection of funerals and technology in the modern era with Dr. Chomi Makina. From the role of funeral directors to the ancient origins of death care, discover how advancements in tech are reshaping end-of-life rituals. Gain insight on the evolving landscape of funeral services and the importance of compassion in navigating the delicate process of honoring the departed.

  • Funerals
  • Technology
  • Digital Age
  • Modern Era
  • Death Care

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  1. IIZ 2015 WINTER SCHOOL THEME: INSURANCE IN A DIGITAL WORLD THE TIME IS NOW TOPIC: BEYOND THE FUNERAL HOME: FUNERALS IN AN AGE OF TECHNOLOGY PRESENTER: DR C MAKINA DR CHOMI MAKINA 1

  2. CONTENTS 1.QUOTES 2.FUNNY HUMOUR 3.INTRODUCTION 4.VARIOUS TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES 5.CONCLUSION DR CHOMI MAKINA 2

  3. 1. QUOTES Life is pleasant. Death is peaceful. It s the transition that s troublesome Isaac Asimov - # inspired nuggets I am not Afraid of death; I just don t want to be there when it happens Woody Allen # inspired nuggets DR CHOMI MAKINA 3

  4. Dying is nothing to be afraid of. For a start you cannot fail at it, and secondly you get a certificate: Dr Joanne Duran # inspired nuggets Oh death where is thy sting? O grave where is thy victory. The sting of death is sin and the strength of sin is the Law But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 Cor 15 vs 55 - # inspired nuggets DR CHOMI MAKINA 4

  5. 2. F/H DR CHOMI MAKINA 5

  6. DR CHOMI MAKINA 6

  7. DR CHOMI MAKINA 7

  8. DR CHOMI MAKINA 8

  9. 3. INTRODUCTION -When we face the tragedy of death, we look to family and friends to shepherd us through the difficult time. Some give spiritual guidance others help us navigate the strange and delicate logistics. In fact death care or what we do with the deceased, dates back to the beginnings of human life. We find it in the bible and we find it being done by the ancient Egyptians. DR CHOMI MAKINA 9

  10. -In modern times, funeral directors do more than simply prepare the body. They co-ordinate and organise burial needs, such as securing a hearse and coffin, and plan the viewing and graveside services. When someone dies grieving family and friends also need a caring professional, and an efficient administrator to handle documents we do not think about in our everyday lives. -Since funeral directors enter our lives at such stressful times, they need a compassion, respect DR CHOMI MAKINA 10

  11. and knowledge of different customs, rituals and traditions a delicate balance of a business like efficiency and an emotional strength and support, all without treading on the boundaries of families during an often tumultuous time. A funeral is not like a wedding, a wedding is complex but with the wedding you have more than a year to do it When there is a death, there is only a week or less to plan for it. DR CHOMI MAKINA 11

  12. 4. VARIOUS TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES Living Headstones use technology to honour the dead. (A Seattle Monument maker affixes a small QR or quick response code like a bar code, but square to the tombstone. A smart phone with the right application lets visitors read the person s life history online. DR CHOMI MAKINA 12

  13. High tech headstones speak from beyond the grave. They use QR codes to link to photos and videos of the dearly departed. Profit Death Cafes helps people talk about dying a sign perhaps that the subject is less taboo than it once was DR CHOMI MAKINA 13

  14. SOCIAL MEDIA 1) We now have websites where families are enabled to collaborate and plan online, while keeping the Funeral Provider up to date with their wishes. These days people are dispersed in the diaspora etc and it can be difficult to communicate but this online planning helps. People can also plan their own funerals. Clients can keep track of all the arrangements. People can also plan for the end of their lives from wills to funerals. People have to make informed decisions, not distress purchases DR CHOMI MAKINA 14

  15. 2) Social media is now an integral part of the story when it comes to technology affecting a community after someone s passing. Online friends are taking on the task of keeping the deceased s network alive by posting to their facebook wall, sharing personal photos and reminiscing about old times. Someone s account can stay open indefinately through, the contribution of friends and family members and can serve as a living and changing tribute. 15 DR CHOMI MAKINA

  16. Digital Filing Its now possible to store important digital files, family photos and wills in remote cloud servers. Perhaps the most far-fetched, yet not impossible idea doing the rounds is the idea of holography. Hologram technology offers a 3D likeness that can move and speak as if the person were really present. Its expensive for the average person and also the technology has not yet come full circle, it is possible that in the future individuals will DR CHOMI MAKINA 16

  17. record a personalised hologram message that can be delivered to their families and friends after they pass away. Telephone The telephone used to be the first point of contract when a death occurred but now people operate with cellphones and computers. We now live in an age where people send photos and authorizations to the funeral home from their smartphones and use text or whatsapp to communicate with an DR CHOMI MAKINA 17

  18. Ever-widening circle of contacts. Technology reduces stress for the bereaved family. While we criticise e-mail and texting for being impersonal, in the case of death, that nature allows us to delay or contemplate difficult details, when we are ready on our own time, in our own private space. Texting is more convenient for grieving members and funeral homes alike, provided the Funeral Director has asked for permission to do so and usually families have permitted Funeral Directors DR CHOMI MAKINA 18

  19. Funeral directors to use it. People who use technology regularly and are comfortable with it are easier to move into that kind of relationship. Live Streaming Online Funerals are on the rise. Families in the Diaspora who cannot travel to the funeral can watch live streaming of a Funeral in progress online on a password protected website. DR CHOMI MAKINA 19

  20. USE OF AGGREGATORS This is a website portal or search utility to enable a client to gain several quotes via an electronic e- quote form. The insurance aggregator concludes agreements with a number of Insurers to provide a comparative quote based on pre-determined list of specified needs as disclosed by potential clients. In Zimbabwe Zimselector is a recent addition to the aggregators found all over the developed and developing countries. DR CHOMI MAKINA 20

  21. Internationally there has been a significant increase in the amount of Insurance contracts concluded via the internet. OTHER BURIAL ALTERNATIVES RESOMATION -Dissolving of tissues as an alternative to traditional cremation. The process called resomation or bio-cremation uses heated water and potassium hydroxide to liquify the body, leaving only bones behind. The bones are then pulverized, much as in regular cremation and fragments returned to family. This process eliminates the carbon footprints that cremation leaves behind. DR CHOMI MAKINA 21

  22. -Cremation releases carbon dioxide as well as trace chemicals such as mercury from dental filling. ETERNAL REEFS -For those who prefer to nourish a more aquatic environment after death there is the Eternal Reef option. Eternal Reefs create artificial reef material out of a mixture of concrete and human remains. These heavy concrete orbs are then placed in areas where reefs need restoration, attracting fish and other organisms that turn the remains into an DR CHOMI MAKINA 22

  23. an undersea habitat. CRYONICS And then there are those who want to hang on to their old life. Cryonics is the process of freezing a person s body in the hopes that later medical science will make it possible to revive them, personality and memory intact. There were just over 200 people in Cryonics in the USA as of August 2011. Prices vary depending on the procedure, preservation company and payment DR CHOMI MAKINA 23

  24. plan, but can range as high as $200 000 for whole body preservation. SPACE BURIAL -Your ashes can be shot into space by a rocket. According to Celetis Memorial space flights a company that offers the postmortem flights, a low orbit journey that lets your (remains experience zero gravity before return to each starts at $995. A chance to orbit Earth and eventually burn up in the atmosphere runs around $3 000. Dedicated DR CHOMI MAKINA 24

  25. space lovers can have themselves launched to the moon or into deep space for $10 000 and $12 000USD respectively. MUMMIFICATION It is not just for ancient Egyptions price of human mummification starts at $63 000USD. They hope their preserved DNA will enable future scientists to clone them and give them (at least their genes) a second shot at life. DR CHOMI MAKINA 25

  26. PLASTINATION - Much like mummification, plastination involves preserving the body in a semi-recognizable form. It was invented by scientist Gunther Von Hagens. Plastination is used in medical schools and anatomy labs to preserve organ specimens for education. But Von Hagens has taken the process further creating exhibits of plastinated bodies posed as if frozen in the midst of their everyday activities. DR CHOMI MAKINA 26

  27. According to the Institute of plastination, thousands have signed up to donate their bodies for education and display. FREEZE DRYING - The newest comer on the eco-burial stage is a process called Promession, or put more plainly freeze-drying. The process involves immersing the corpse in liquid nitrogen, which makes it very brittle. Vibrations shake the body apart and the DR CHOMI MAKINA 27

  28. water is evaporated away in a special vacuum chamber. Next, a separator filters out any mercury fillings or surgical implants and the powdered remains are laid to rest in a shallow grave. With a shallow burial oxygen and water can mix with the powdered remains, turning them into compost. GREEN BURIAL Green or natural burial is a way of caring for the dead with minimal environmental impact that aids in the conservation of natural resources, DR CHOMI MAKINA 28

  29. Resources, reduction of carbon emissions protection of worker health and the restoration and /or preservation of habitat. Green burial necessitates the use of non-toxic and bio- degradable materials, such as caskets, shroud and urns. CONCLUSION The examples above demonstrate how technology is already reshaping the funeral landscape, as we know it. DR CHOMI MAKINA 29

  30. As technology becomes more firmly embeded into our culture. I am sure we will see it revolutionize our death care rituals and our whole concept of death and memorialization. DR CHOMI MAKINA 30

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