The town of Săpânţa in Romania has an interesting way of remembering its deceased. Rather than the usual somber stone grave markers; the headstones are colorful wooden carvings, complete with poetic verses describing the lives of the deceased. Dubbed the "Merry Cemetery", it has become a national tourist attraction.
Below is the headstone of the carpenter whose carvings inspired the creation of the cemetery:
His Epitaph is as follows:
Since I was a little boyWhile some tombstones depict scenes from the life of the deceased, others depict the manner in which the person died, including this one of a three year old killed by a car:
I was known as Stan Ioan Pătraş
Listen to me, fellows
There are no lies in what I am going to say
All along my life
I meant no harm to anyone
But did good as much as I could
To anyone who asked
Oh, my poor World
Because It was hard living in it
Or a sixteen year old electrocuted by a crane:
Which, as the photographer Michael Foord points out, is not very merry at all. (You can see the entire album of photos he took here.)
I suppose though that a life is better remembered in cheerful color, than in some barren gray slab of rock.
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