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Professional China tomb-sweepers spruce up sites, perform rituals, live-stream rites for absent clients

  • Busy tomb-cleaning pros say they have to bow more than 100 times a day to meet demand
  • Growth of rites outsourcing business splits opinion on mainland social media

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The annual Ching Ming Festival has seen a growth in the number of professional tomb-sweepers in China who carry out rituals for worshippers who cannot be at gravesides in person. Photo: SCMP composite/Baidu
Yating Yangin Beijing

Ching Ming Festival, also known as the Tomb Sweeping Festival, has seen the growth of a unique service in China, the outsourcing of graveside rituals to professionals.

Some practitioners even live-stream the whole process for people who cannot attend in person.

In Hangzhou, the capital city of Zhejiang province in southeastern China, professional funeral ritualist Zou Mengjun says she has seen demand for her services grow.

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At present, she is responsible for cleaning 20 to 30 graves daily for absent clients. The workload means she has to bow more than 100 times a day.

Her services include cleaning tombstones and then adorning them with fruit, fresh flowers and memorial ribbons.

Professional tomb-sweeper, Zou Mengjun, says business has boomed in recent years. Photo: Baidu
Professional tomb-sweeper, Zou Mengjun, says business has boomed in recent years. Photo: Baidu

Based on client requests, Zou may also recite eulogies, play the deceased’s favourite music at their grave and even live-stream the entire process.

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