Grave Digging: A Lucrative Business In Rural Jamaica

AN inex­pe­ri­enced selec­tor blasts music from portable speak­er box­es, pock­ets of smoke per­me­ate the air from the pots of ven­dors, young and old dance up a storm — it is grave-dig­ging time and grave dig­ging is a lucra­tive busi­ness in rur­al Jamaica.

When it a gwaan good you sell, trust me, but when it poor a just suh,” said Charmaine Douglas-West, a ven­dor look­ing to ben­e­fit from the day’s business.

Mi work inna bar in gen­er­al, but mi seh, ‘you know, bar slow inna di day’, so mi come out here. You see peo­ple do it and you seh ‘alright mek mi try it’. And it work, trust mi; it work because even when mi sell at di ninth night den mi get good sale. Mi fol­low some of the bands dem and dem will call mi some­times and tell mi where dem play­ing,” she con­tin­ued as she watched the day’s pro­ceed­ings at the Buff Bay ceme­tery in Portland.

Wednesday is the tra­di­tion­al grave-dig­ging day for parish­es in east­ern Jamaica and many seek to ben­e­fit from it. The Jamaica Observer North East team observed nine graves being dug in the neigh­bor­ing parish­es of St Mary and Portland.

It’s a way to earn, trust me,” those attend­ing will tell you, while advis­ing that you exer­cise patience cou­pled with a socia­ble demeanour to meet your goal.

That is how you get by, that is how you cap­i­talise on earn­ings from those mourn­ing or cel­e­brat­ing the dead.

Yuh have some places weh yuh can’t give it out in pri­vate to the funer­al home. Yuh have to give it to com­mu­ni­ty peo­ple or dem will vex and seh how yuh nuh mek dem help you bury your fam­i­ly and dig di grave,” Patrick Green said from the back of his van, which was loaded with items for sale.

Green not­ed that sales for the day depends heav­i­ly on the per­son who has died or that dead person’s family.

Some peo­ple car­ry a big­ger crowd. The more famous the per­son is or fam­i­ly mem­ber, the big­ger the grave dig­ging. Normally mi bring mi sound, play some gospel, then some big peo­ple music, then lat­er on down inna di evening when it touch 5 o’clock mi play di young peo­ple dem song,” he said as he described how he oper­ates on a typ­i­cal grave dig­ging day.

For Calvin Hill, a man who has spent 27 years dig­ging graves, busi­ness is always good.

Sometimes mi get five, some­times mi get six, accord­ing to how di peo­ple dem dead. Mi will bury five Saturday and four Sunday reg­u­lar­ly you know,” he explained, though admit­ting that he would dig graves every day if it were up to him.

For the Portlander, it is the eas­i­est way to make $8,000 — dig­ging the earth four feet deep, then fin­ish­ing up with six blocks.

Yeah man, a suh mi mek mi mon­ey. Mi nuh work wid parish coun­cil; mi mek mi mon­ey offa di peo­ple. I work with di peo­ple. You come and doing a grave, I work with you, you give me something.

Yuh come and mi seh, ‘Bwoy, gim­mi a $8,000,’ and yuh can’t pay dat, mi naah kill yuh. Yuh seh, ‘ras­ta­man, yuh know seh mi can’t pay eight,’ mi seh ‘give mi five’. A it help mi fi live,” Hill added.

While con­cur­ring that it’s a job many would shy away from, the 57-year-old said it is some­thing he loves.

I don’t afraid of noth­ing. You see on earth, only live peo­ple can do you things. Dead peo­ple can’t do you noth­ing. A live peo­ple obeah yuh, a live peo­ple shoot yuh, a live peo­ple stab yuh. Mi an’ dem [dup­py] live an’ dem nev­er do mi noth­ing from mi an’ dem live.

I am here every day and some­body soon come in and mi have a food to eat. A suh mi live. Wi must affi die; yuh think mi count out myself? I would nev­er do that. a nuh mi mek life, a God mek life,” Hill said. Story orig­i­nat­ed here : http://​www​.jamaicaob​serv​er​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​G​r​a​v​e​-​d​i​g​g​ing – A‑lucrative-busi­ness-in-rur­al-Jamaica_84026

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