It took Abu Haider and his relatives several hours to dig up his nephew’s grave and exhume the body at a cemetery in the southern Iraqi city of Najaf built especially for COVID-19 victims.
When they had finished, they shrouded the body in white sheets, loaded it on to the back of a pickup truck and set off to re-inter it in Najaf’s old “Valley of Peace” graveyard, the traditional resting place for Iraq’s Shi’ites.
In doing so, Abu Haider is not only relieving the pain of losing a loved one to the coronavirus pandemic that has infected nearly 300,000 Iraqis and killed more than 8,000.
He is also defying an order from religious leaders who consider the new cemetery to be a legitimate burial place.
“We must not dig up Muslim graves, this is clear among religious leaders, in their positions and in their books,” he said.
Abu Haider, a practising Shi’ite, said he had no choice but to defy the edict.
The old cemetery is where members of his family have been buried for generations.
After the outbreak of the pandemic in Iraq, some tribes and religious authorities in different parts of the country refused to bury victims of the coronavirus in local cemeteries, fearing that corpses could still be contagious.
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