/ 7 November 2005

Growing number of Irish dead ringers

Ireland’s obsession with the cellphone has sunk to new depths with a growing number of people now taking them with them to the grave, according to undertakers on Monday.

The cellphone has become a must-have accessory for young people, with 94% of people owning one.

Ireland has a tradition of people being buried with some of their most treasured possessions alongside them in the coffin and there is a growing trend for a cellphone to accompany people to the hereafter.

”People will sometimes leave mementos in coffins with the deceased and nowadays it is happening that people are taking their mobile phones with them,” said Peter Flanagan, of Kirwan’s funeral homes in Dublin.

”There is a fear that some people have that they will be buried alive. They have contact with the outside world if they have a mobile phone with them.”

Flanagan said that traditional items that are buried with people include family photographs and wedding rings. Some older people might be buried with their favourite tipple, such as a bottle of whiskey.

Families burying phones with their loved ones are encouraged either to turn them off or to switch them to silent or vibration alert.

”Obviously you don’t want a phone ringing inside a coffin during a funeral,” Flanagan said.

Another funeral director, Keith Massey, is also noticing the growing trend to bury cellphones, particularly with young people.

”There is a fair bit of it. When a young person dies, as opposed to as old person, it is very upsetting for most people.

”Lots of young people’s friends don’t know how to cope with death. You find the coffins are stuffed with the personal belongings of the deceased, including increasingly their mobile phones.

”Mobile phones are a huge part of the lives of young people these days, particularly young girls.

”If they are fans of a sport, there might also be a scarf in the coffin or some other memento.”

Massey said that even though people are embalmed, some put a phone in for people to get in touch if they wake up.

”This is despite the fact that there is more chance of them being taken up into space by aliens than waking up.

”Some people are superstitious and insist the phone is turned off, so that if they do wake up they will have battery power when the phone is turned on again,” Massey said.

According to ComReg, Ireland’s telecommunications and broadcasting regulator, there are more than 3,83-million cellphones in the country and each owner sends an average of 91 text messages a month. — Sapa-AFP