The first funeral I ever did was a week after arriving as a deacon at St Canice’s in Kings Cross, the red light district of Sydney. I was asked to do a “pauper’s funeral”, the appalling Dickensian name given to a state-funded cremation.
Karl had been a homeless man, an alcoholic, who had died on the street. The two saintly religious sisters who had cared for him for several years organised his funeral. The nuns thought it would be unlikely that anyone else would turn up.
On the day, there were three more mourners in attendance. After the readings and prayers, and because I had not met Karl, I invited the congregation to share their memories of him. Towards the back of the chapel, the two sisters were shaking their heads. It was too late. A short, stout woman was quickly on her feet. “Thank you very much, Father,” she said deferentially.
03 November 2016, The Tablet
Whatever might characterise the soul, memory is an integral part of it
Get Instant Access
Continue Reading
Register for free to read this article in full
Subscribe for unlimited access
From just £30 quarterly
Complete access to all Tablet website content including all premium content.
The full weekly edition in print and digital including our 179 years archive.
PDF version to view on iPad, iPhone or computer.
Already a subscriber? Login