Keeping faith
The coronavirus has changed how we live our lives, and how we deal with death.
The coronavirus has fundamentally changed how we live our lives, but perhaps most heartbreakingly, how we deal with death. Around the world, centuries-old burial rituals have been abandoned. Even something as simple as a hug for a grieving friend is now essentially out of bounds. We look at how communities and individuals are adapting.
Also, writer and lawyer Wajahat Ali talks about faith in times of turmoil; many religious leaders are turning to video conferencing as an alternative to in-person services, but for orthodox Jews, that is problematic; we hear a Buddhist perspective on isolation and enlightenment in the time of Covid-19; and religious leaders tackle the big question: why.
Image: Pallbearers bring the coffin of a deceased person to be stored into the church of San Giuseppe in Seriate, near Bergamo, Lombardy. (Credit: Piero Cruciatti/Getty Images)
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- Sat 18 Apr 2020 22:32GMT麻豆社 World Service
- Sun 19 Apr 2020 03:32GMT麻豆社 World Service
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Boston Calling
How the world looks through American eyes, and the myriad and unexpected ways that the world influences the United States.