Hong Kong launches website to honour the dead
Saturday - Jun 12, 2010, 03:49pm (GMT+5.5)
Sydney(ANI): A website has been set up in Hong Kong that allows friends and relatives to pay homage to their departed ones online.
The website, created by the Hong Kong Food and Environmental Hygiene Department, enables them to set up online profiles for the dead at memorial.gov.hk.
The department, which oversees public cemeteries and crematoriums, spent 128,000 dollars to set up the site.
In Hong Kong where the population is largely Chinese, death is taken very seriously, with elaborate ceremonies being held twice a year not just for the recently deceased but also generations of ancestors gone before them.
The department said in a statement that the site is not meant to replace traditional practices of paying tribute to the deceased, instead, it allows people to pay tribute to their loved ones "any time and anywhere online, in a warm, personalised yet solemn manner".
It also said that the site is specially convenient for friends and relative who are living overseas.
The website is free, but access is restricted to relatives of those buried or cremated in facilities operated by the government.
Users can choose from preset layouts and background music and can upload photos and videos to complement the profiles.
The "builder" of the profile can also choose whether to receive reminders of the deceased's birthday and date of death and can invite others to browse the page and post messages, if they chose to make the page public.
But even though the site provides an easy way of honouring loved ones, some have not met it with favour.
Wu Kwok-kin, the owner of a shop that sells funeral wreaths, favours more traditional mourning rituals.
"There's no need to build a website," the Sydney Morning Herald quoted him as saying.
"The government should have put up money to build more public vaults for urns," he stated.
Other critics say the site is not a sincere way to respect the dead. Some also say it is too much like a video game, though there are others who are happy with it.
"Those who pass away get something on the Internet that belongs to them," Kit Fan said as he waited for a bus near a big funeral home in Hong Kong.
"But people still need to go to the funeral," he added.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Uninsured patients more likely to die from trauma than insured ones (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
New DNA study may offer insights into several diseases (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Sense of smell test key to tackling Parkinson's disease (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Why saliva forms beads when stretched (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Insects extremely clever despite tiny brains: Study (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Prehistoric shark Carcharodon megalodon's bite biggest of all dinos (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Modified yellow fever vaccine may help fight malaria (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Reducing deforestation results in more fires: Study (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Scientists unlock how 'freezing' to death can be reversed (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
New computer game to spot how blind to change are you (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Why humans have no fur (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Love hormone could also trigger war (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
It's official: Men look at women's breasts first (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
'Female viagra' could be approved next week by the FDA (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Brit professor to outline his vision for a renewable energy powered UK (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Youth clubs strengthen children's self image (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Scientists observe budding solar systems (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Now, dating site for people who love Apple products (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
No 'safe haven' for organic molecules on Mars (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Flu's secret evolution strategy unveiled (12th Jun, 2010) |
 |
New method can help identify genetic disease in record time (11th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Replica of human collagen from tobacco plants could be a medical boon (11th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Co-witnesses 'can influence children's testimony' (11th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Giant sea reptiles were warm-blooded: Study (11th Jun, 2010) |
 |
Raphael's The Madonna of the Pinks no 19th-century fake (11th Jun, 2010) |
|