International | Terminal verbosity

Covid-19 is helping wealthy countries talk about death

Amid mass mortality, a taboo is fading

UNTIL THIS year many New Yorkers had never heard of Hart Island, where the city’s unclaimed dead are buried. Then, in the midst of the pandemic, video of contractors digging long trenches there went viral. Around 120 bodies were sent to the tiny islet every week, as burial grounds and crematoriums struggled to keep pace with covid-19. One funeral home in Brooklyn was sued for stacking bodies in an unrefrigerated rental truck. At the peak of the epidemic Sal Farenga, an undertaker in the Bronx, was doing three times as many funerals as usual and turning away 50 grieving families a day. “It was heartbreaking,” Mr Farenga says.

This article appeared in the International section of the print edition under the headline “Deathly silence”

Winners and losers: How covid-19 is reordering the global economy

From the October 10th 2020 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from International

An illustration of a plug and a socket separated but a fence with barbed wire.

Why don’t more countries import their electricity? 

The economics make sense, but the geopolitics are nerve-racking

An illustration of an eagle supporting a globe on it's back between its wings and looking back at it.

Trump unmasks American selfishness, say cynics

But sceptics are wrong to call America First business as usual


A helicopter flies above Houthi forces boarding the cargo ship Galaxy Leader.

Inside the Houthis’ moneymaking machine

After a ceasefire in Gaza, they may continue their Red Sea racket


Marco Rubio will find China is hard to beat in Latin America

China buys lithium, copper and bull semen, and doesn’t export its ideology

Donald Trump has a strong foreign-policy hand, but could blow it

Bullying foreigners can be sadly effective, but also a dangerous distraction

Women warriors and the war on woke

Trump’s Pentagon pick wants women off the battlefield