BBC casts spotlight on modern Greek burial practices

Cremation is legal but not available in Greece due to church opposition

The BBC feature on Greece, titled “Graveyard Overcrowding Stokes Cremation Debate in Greece”, focuses on problems concerning burials at cemeteries in Athens and Thessaloniki that are overcrowded. The cost of a permanent grave plot is at 100,000 euros, meaning that cremation – legalized in 2006 – would be a more viable option. Nonetheless, there are no crematoria in Greece due to opposition by the Church that views cremation as a violation of the human body.

As a result, limited grave space in Greece needs to be recycled. The renting out of grave plots typically is leased out for three years at 2,500-3,000 euros. After that time, families are called to the graveside to witness the exhumation. Families can either take the body of their loved ones at a communal storage area known as an ossuary or to a regional cemetary where there is no space. If no family member is present at the exhumation, the bones are dissolved in chemicals and remnants are placed at a common burial plot.

Committees in favor of cremation in Greece have spurted after families witness loved ones’ exhumations. Cremation would cost half the price of renting a grave plot for three years and would reduce both financial pressure and the emotional toll caused by exhumation.