Crisis of the dead Chander P Mahajan ‘The death of a person or two is a tragedy. When many people die, those are statistics’. Josef Stalin Crematoriums and cemeteries are running out of space; people are helplessly changing rituals for their dead as Covid-19 rages and the world looks on in horror. The crematorium at Kanlog near Shimla is over brimming. The covid infectedcorpses are being cremated as also the non-Covid dead. “It’s difficult to handle the rush because it takes four to five hours to cremate a body donning the personal protection equipment (PPE) kit”. Thetraditional crematory is located near a mystic waterfall; a conglomerate of Bamloe Nala and sewerage from Nirankari Bhawan. Way back in 1998-99, Rotary Club of Shimla joined hands with ‘Jan Kalyan Vikas Samiti-khalini & kanlog’ followed by Phagli, Nabha & Ramnagar areas to evolvethe heritage pyres in to a full- fledged crematorium. Sitewasearmarked around the existing pyres. The Envoirnment wing of the H P Forest Department grantedpermission to the change of the ‘land use’. ‘Vikas mein jan Sehyog’,Government of Himachal Pradesh,extended ‘Grant in Aid’ to this urban feature to the extentof 25% ; admissible up to50% for Rural areas. Mr. Umesh Akre, the then Chairman, Rotary Crematorium Committee, keenlyled the mission.