China's Wuhan marks sombre Qing Ming festival amid coronavirus

People pay respects to their ancestors on the eve of Qing Ming, in Wuhan, on April 3, 2020. PHOTO: AFP

WUHAN (REUTERS) - Each year for the tomb sweeping festival, Wuhan resident Dai Jinfeng drives with her mother to a nearby cemetery to pay respects to their ancestors.

The coronavirus has changed that ritual this year.

Also known as Qing Ming, the festival which falls on Saturday (April 4) is one of the most important dates in the traditional Chinese lunar calendar, and usually sees millions of families travel to tend to their ancestral graves, offer flowers and burn incense.

But Chinese authorities are strongly discouraging or limiting the practice across the country this year as they fight the coronavirus, asking citizens to rely instead on cemetery workers to perform those duties should they wish to do so.

Those restrictions are arguably the strictest in Wuhan, which has been ravaged more than anywhere in China since the virus first emerged there last year. As of Friday, 2,567 people in the city had died of the virus while 50,008 were infected.

The authorities in the city of 11 million have banned all tomb sweeping activities in its cemeteries until at least April 30.

They have also told residents, the majority of whom are stuck at home due to lockdown restrictions, to use online streaming services which will allow them to watch cemetery staff carrying out those tasks live.

Those tight restrictions and concerns over the virus are why Ms Dai is not carrying out the annual ritual with her 67-year-old mother, who lives alone.

"She keeps asking me whether I'm going back," the 40-year-old the property agent told Reuters this week as she broke into tears. "I don't dare to call her any more because the tomb sweeping festival is coming up... and it is especially important to the elderly."

FINDING ALTERNATIVES

Still, some in Wuhan found alternative ways to commemorate the festival and find solace in spite of those restrictions.

Residents on Friday burned joss paper, a tradition which they believe sends money and wealth to deceased relatives, on sidewalks and within the confines of their barricaded housing compounds.

Some people left fresh flowers including chrysanthemums, a traditional funeral flower in Chinese culture, on the banks of the Yangtze River that runs through Wuhan.

"There is an epidemic but this is China's tradition, we can't cast it aside," said a man as he burned four stacks of joss paper, standing alongside his wife.

One of those stacks, he said, was dedicated to the memory of a 29-year-old doctor, Dr Xia Sisi, who died in February from the coronavirus after treating patients in Wuhan. They are not related but share the same surname, he said.

Still, people said it was notably quieter this year, with one seller of paper offerings saying that sales were around 20 per cent of what they would usually be.

The Chinese government has said that no ceremonies or funerals can held for the victims of coronavirus due to its highly contagious nature.

China will on Saturday also observe three minutes of silence nationwide at 10am to mourn the thousands of"martyrs" who died in the fight against the pandemic. It has asked for flags to be flown at half mast and air raid sirens as well as car and train horns to "wail in grief" after.

Ms Dai, the property agent, said she hopes she and her mother can resume how they usually spend the tomb sweeping festival next year, when the epidemic is over.

For now, "it's better to focus on the living", she said.

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