In the Democratic Republic of Congo, where a new Ebola outbreak has claimed over 2,000 lives since 2018, the ritual of grieving has been rewritten. The deadliest part of this epidemic is not the virus itself, but the touch of a loved one. Health workers, armed with thermometers and sanitiser, now double as grief counsellors, coaching families through a process that feels more like a forensic procedure than a funeral.
“I buried my parents one day after the other,” says a woman named Marie, her voice trembling over a stuttering satellite phone from Butembo. “They taught us to wrap them in plastic. We could not even hold their hands.” Her story is not unique. Across the sprawling camps and cramped villages, a new protocol has emerged: families are allowed to view the body, but only from a distance of two metres. No kissing. No washing. No touching. The body bag is sealed with tape, and the grave is dug by strangers in hazmat suits.
The World Health Organization, working with local anthropologists, realised early on that traditional mourning rituals were super-spreading events. In West Africa, during the 2014 outbreak, funeral attendance led to up to 60% of new infections. The solution? Not a ban on funerals, but a reengineering of them. Teams now travel to villages, carrying portable coffins and chlorine spray. They train community leaders to conduct ‘safe burials’ where mourners can still sing, pray and throw symbolic handfuls of dirt, but from a safe distance.
This is not about suppressing culture. It is about preserving it within a new technological framework. In Kindu, a mobile app allows families to designate a ‘digital griever’ who will later perform the last rites on a smartphone screen. It sounds like something from a Black Mirror episode, but for communities where the alternative is a mass grave, it is a lifeline. “We learned that people accept change when it is framed as a sacrifice for the community,” says Dr. Thérèse Nkuba, a Congolese epidemiologist. “We tell them: you are not abandoning your loved one. You are protecting the living.”
Critics argue that this is a slippery slope. When does safe grieving become sterile grief? But for now, the numbers speak for themselves. The Ebola case fatality rate has dropped from 70% in rural areas to below 40% in regions where safe burial protocols are enforced. The virus still kills, but it no longer exploits the human instinct to mourn.
As I watch a training session in a makeshift morgue, a woman starts to weep as her father’s body is placed in a reusable coffin (lined with a leak-proof bag, of course). A health worker, also crying, holds her hand and whispers: “Your tears are safe. Your heart is not.” That is the brutal arithmetic of Ebola: we can sanitise the body, but not the sorrow. We can digitise the ritual, but not the loss. And yet, in this dystopian laboratory, a new form of humanity is emerging, one where grief itself is patrolled by public health algorithms.
The lesson for the rest of us, staring down a pandemic that has already taught us to video-call our own funerals? We are only beginning to understand the cost of connection. The people of the DRC are writing our future grief manual, one tearful, safe, socially distanced burial at a time.








