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A Lack Of Space Is Forcing Hong Kong To Use Phones To Honour Its Dead

A lack of space for cemeteries in crowded Hong Kong is clashing with the Chinese tradition of reverence for ancestors.
A man walks past tombstones at a cemetery ahead of the Ching Ming Festival, or grave-sweeping day, in Hong Kong.
DALE DE LA REY via Getty Images
A man walks past tombstones at a cemetery ahead of the Ching Ming Festival, or grave-sweeping day, in Hong Kong.

HONG KONG (Reuters) - A lack of space for cemeteries in crowded Hong Kong clashes with the age-old Chinese tradition of reverence for one's ancestors.

But one entrepreneur uses virtual reality software to reconcile the two, allowing people to honor Confucian traditions of filial obligation in the territory where it can cost up to $130,000 to store theashes of loved ones.

Anthony Yau's firm, iVeneration.com, offers users the ability to create virtual headstones anywhere in an augmented reality landscape of Hong Kong, including such unlikely places as a downtown park.

Apart from the cost savings, Yau expects his business model to appeal to more eco-conscious young residents.

"The dead are taking so much more space than those who are still alive, as those buried use that piece of land for many years," said Yau, as he manipulated his mobile telephone to correctly position a candle in front of a virtual headstone.

Anthony Yuen, CEO of iVeneration.com, demonstrates an augmented reality graveyard at his office in Hong Kong.
Bobby Yip / Reuters
Anthony Yuen, CEO of iVeneration.com, demonstrates an augmented reality graveyard at his office in Hong Kong.

"For those who are still alive, they won't stay on the same piece of land forever."

Yau, who hopes to launch the website to the public in the first quarter of 2018, has already attracted 300 users.

Filial piety, or respect for parents and older people, is a paramount virtue in the Confucian tradition.

"We need to educate the next generation on filial piety, no matter how you show it, as long as it comes from the heart," Yau added. "We think the next generation might use these services for their parents."

A man burns paper offerings at the grave of a relative during the Chung Yeung grave sweeping festival at a cemetery in Hong Kong.
TENGKU BAHAR via Getty Images
A man burns paper offerings at the grave of a relative during the Chung Yeung grave sweeping festival at a cemetery in Hong Kong.

Alex Lee, a 46-year-old employee of a technology company, uses iVeneration to pay his respects to his departed grandfather.

"Everyone is aware the lack of land is a problem in Hong Kong and the government has been encouraging green burial," said Lee, as he leafed through an album of family photographs.

"For me, you don't have to go to a thing to remember those passed away, it's all in your heart."

(Reporting by Pak Yiu; Writing by Christian Schmollinger; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

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