Tomb-sweeping is usually a very somber affair, usually. Now in a surge to promote eco-friendly āburialsā and body disposals, China has gamified the tradition.
Due to growing concerns about property ownership (you can only own land for 70 years in China) to the cost of funeral plots, China has been urging its people to conduct eco friendly burials. Pushing these land saving methods of burials through sea, tree, and floral burials for its deceased China has created a cultural problem, no graves or tombs to āsweepā.
Traditionally the tomb-sweeping holiday is a ritual used to appease and show respect to deceased ancestors and loved ones. Families would get together to visit grave sites with food and wine. They would sweep and clean the grave marker, burn some incense offer a quick prayer and burn some paper money or tokens. There has even been burning tokens of paper BMWās and paper iPads to show respect.
https://lastchance.cc/paper-ipads-for-your-dead-chinese-ancestors-5898603%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Luckily, ingenious Chinese leaders and Hong Kong businessmen have come out with a new solution. They invented E-tomb-sweeping, which as been around since 2006. The process of e-tomb-sweeping is simple; mourners can set up an online memorial and pay their respects online by burning virtual incense and pouring virtual tea.
One big government sponsored online cemetery is HeavenCemetery.com which was founded in 2009. For the basic features they offer completely free service. Users can post a few pictures of the deceased and write as many words as they see fit. If the user decides to upload more pictures, or even audio and visual, it will start costing money. According to Heaven Cemeteryās website, each memorial comes with a personalized URL, and can be either public or private.
Despite itās solemn nature, some folks have been having a little āfunā, making memorials for passed celebrities and such. A quick glance over many of the public memorials and you can find one for people such as Steve Jobs and Whitney Houston.
The current trend of online tomb-sweeping taking off in cities across China becoming a convenient way for Chinese working faraway from home to pay their respects without having to travel. Last year, a Shanghai based company called āEternal Homeā set up China and arguably the worldās first 3D online cemetery.
Waheaven[Heaven Cemetery Chinese Homepage]