Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Expanding our Educational Outreach | Page 21

Prominent Japanese Funeral Directors Visit Mount Auburn Director of Education & Visitor Services Bree Harvey gave the group a tour of the grounds and the crematory. Coming from land-scarce Japan, the delegation was in awe of the spaciousness and beauty of the Cemetery. “They thought it was just stunning,” says Vice President of Cem- etery Services Richard Dalton. “For them to experience this ‘park’ was extraordinary.” In Japan, the funeral industry and the wedding industry are run as joint businesses. Three or four companies host the majority of funerals in the country, in “funeral halls.” Katsuhiko Matsui, the president of Sun-Life Corporation, one of Japan’s largest such companies, visited Mount Au- burn with the group. The average cost of a funeral in Japan is $25,000, and people save for this milestone throughout their lives. Japanese funeral customs are becoming more westernized, and funeral directors in Japan are replicating certain aesthetic aspects of, for example, British customs. One company has imported two British Victorian Gothic chapels, stone-by-stone, to be used as settings for weddings. On the other hand, in this era of globalization and marked cultural diversity within the United States, Richard Dalton stresses that Mount Auburn, too, can learn from other cultures as it increasingly accommodates people of diverse traditions. Eight Japanese funeral directors visited Mount Auburn on October 21, 2007, as part of a nationwide tour to learn about “excellence in management within all aspects of funeral service.” The seven-day visit, arranged through The Dodge Company of Cambridge (founded in 1893 and the largest supplier of funeral equipment in the United States) in cluded stops in cemeteries in St. Louis and southern California and a tour of the National Museum of Funeral History in Houston, TX. Most Japanese funerals end in cremation, so the group wanted to see how Americans are dealing with the increasing popularity of that practice. Craig Caldwell of The Dodge Company chose Mount Auburn as a stop because of “the vast difference between a Japanese cemetery and Mount Auburn. It is not com- mon to find a garden setting cemetery in Japan, nor is it often that a Japanese cemetery would have a wide range of monuments and differing burial areas, such as mausoleums, ground for burials, and so on. And their culture has such a great respect for the past that I thought Mount Auburn would be a perfect fit for their visit.” People and Happenings (L to r) Mount Auburn’s Director of An- nual Giving Jennifer Gilbert, Curator of Historical Collections Meg Winslow, and photographer Richard Cheek (of Belmont, MA). Photos by Jennifer Johnston On September 26, Bill Clendaniel spoke at a dinner at the downtown Harvard Club in Boston on “Mount Auburn Cemetery at 175 Years.” In conjunction with the talk, the club hosted an exhibition of color pho- tographs taken by Richard Cheek featuring seasonal views of the Cemetery, dated 1996-2007. The exhibition was curated by Curator of Historical Collections Meg L. Winslow, and ran from September 26 to November 13. Visitors come to Mount Auburn for many reasons, people interested in birding, history, botany, gardening, art and architecture. This summer we had a request from an Englishman, David Bostok, for permission to propose mar- riage to his girlfriend atop Washington Tower. We told him he could and later we received the following email: “It was a perfect evening! She said yes! And was completely surprised and overwhelmed by the setting. Thank you so much for allowing me this privilege.” Fall 2007 | 19