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Natural Awakenings Hudson County NJ

The Green Burial Revolution: Sustainable End-of-Life Options

There’s an emerging movement in the funeral industry, fueled by environmentalism and a yearning to accept mortality and reclaim a connection to Earth and to each other. Although it seems revolutionary, a green burial is as old as humanity, while the conventional burial commonly practiced in the United States is only a bit over 150 years old. 

Continuing a practice that began in the Civil War, the conventional funeral typically involves embalming with toxic chemicals such as formaldehyde to preserve the body for viewing. Elaborate metal and varnished hardwood caskets are lowered into cement or steel burial vaults and entombed in memorial parks, where lawns are maintained with heavy machinery and liberal applications of herbicides and pesticides.

These materials are not just polluting the Earth, but depleting resources only to bury them forever. “You can build a replication of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco annually with all the metal placed in the ground. Why would we bury these materials that people could actually be using?” says Elizabeth Fournier, a licensed mortician in Portland, Oregon, and author of The Green Burial Guidebook

In a true green burial, the body is put in repose in its natural state; refrigeration or dry ice replaces embalming fluids. Families may choose to bathe and dress their loved one’s body, wrap the body with a natural cotton shroud or place it in a casket made of sustainably grown and biodegradable materials including pine, bamboo, wicker or even cardboard. 

The burial site has a more natural feel, with indigenous plants, meadows and soil untouched by chemicals. The grave is dug and refilled by hand, while family and friends use ropes to lower their loved one directly into the earth. “You’re going back to nature. Your body will decompose and in turn it can nourish the environment. New life will come from your death,” says Ed Bixby, owner of Steelmantown Cemetery Companies and president of the Green Burial Council, which certifies eco-friendly cemeteries and funeral services.

Natural burial sites are public recreational havens where people can hike, birdwatch, cross-country ski or camp. These beautiful cemeteries are full of life and regeneration. “The neat part is that they’re using their income stream for open-space preservation—buying property, using it for burial purposes and dedicating that land so that it will always be open and green,” says Robert Prout, a third-generation funeral director in Verona, New Jersey. Every state has at least one natural burial site. There are hundreds nationwide, and 11 of them are legal preservation grounds, owned and managed by conservation or state agencies.  

As people learn more about green burials and request them, traditional cemeteries are setting aside areas for these alternatives. Bixby is encouraged by the hybrid models. “It’s helping change the direction of the funeral industry. We’re empowering and educating families. That’s how we’re going to grow this movement,” he says.

A green burial will usually cost less than the conventional one. “The environment is suffering, and people’s wallets are suffering,” says Fournier. “People are realizing that you don’t have to spend a lot of money after someone has passed away to show your love.” In some towns, backyard burials are an option, too.

From an emotional and spiritual perspective, there’s a lot to be said for a green burial. “It’s been so clinical for so long, where you wear your black suit. You sit on the sideline. The gravedigger and undertaker do everything. You’re sort of a spectator,” says Fournier. 

“By being a part of the process, there’s a greater sense of acceptance. You can see a lot of the pain and grief wash away,” says Bixby. “It allows us to not only care for our dead, but also not be so afraid of our common denominator. We’re all going to die. It shouldn’t be a scary, disconnected experience.”

Overseen by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, a burial at sea is yet another green option in which the body decomposes naturally on the ocean floor. To find a state-by-state list of natural burial sites, visit the Green Burial Council.

Sandra Yeyati, J.D., is a professional writer. Reach her at [email protected].


A Greener Cremation

Although cremation is greener than a conventional funeral, it is still not as ecological as a natural burial. The process requires a fair amount of natural gas or oil, and releases toxins into the air, especially if the person is embalmed, has mercury tooth fillings or was treated with chemotherapy. The carbon footprint of cremation can be offset when scattering cremains by mixing them into soil and planting a tree in memory of the person or encasing the ashes in a reef ball to give back to the ocean.

A controversial new type of cremation that is legal in only a handful of states—alkaline hydrolysis—offers an even more eco-friendly option. A low-heat water and lye bath slowly dissolves the flesh and neutralizes toxins, leaving only the bones, which are then processed to create ash-like remains. Time will tell if this method is widely adopted. 

 

Living & Dying Green in Greater NJ


Green Burial Spaces

Maryrest Cemetery

171 Clifton Ave.

Newark, NJ 

973-497-7981 • rcancem.org 

Maryrest is the first Catholic cemetery in New Jersey to offer a natural/green burial section. The wildflowers and naturally occurring flora create a serene setting for families who prefer an eco-friendly memorial or want an alternative to cremation.


Rosemont Cemetery

100 Kingwood Stockton Rd.

Rosemont, NJ

609-488-6959 • TheRosemontCemetery.com

Rosemont Cemetery includes a natural burial area at the bottom of the hill, bordered by woodlands and a farm field, to provide a peaceful place for loved ones to visit and for the community to enjoy quiet reflection.

 

Sleepy Hollow Cemetery

540 North Broadway

Sleepy Hollow, NY

914-631-0081 • SleepyHollowCemetery.org


Sleepy Hollow Cemetery has a long and fabled history, but with the opening of its Riverview Natural Burial Grounds, it’s become part of an elite group of forward-thinking burial places offering natural or green options.

 

Steelmantown Cemetery

Natural Burial Ground

327 Marshalville Rd.

​Tuckahoe, NJ  • 609-628-2297

SteelmantownCemetery.com

Steelmantown Cemetery offers both natural burial on land and scattering of ashes at sea. It owns several cemeteries, including ones in Tuckahoe, New Jersey, and Canadensis, Pennsylvania, where the emphasis is on preserving and enhancing the surroundings with natural stone markers and hand-dug burial sites. Scattering ceremonies are held three miles off the Atlantic coast, aboard a restored 30-foot 1955 Sundquist Jersey Sea Skiff.

 

Funeral Homes Offering Green Services

Bradley, Haeberle & Barth Funeral Home

1100 Pine Ave.

​Union, NJ

908-686-6666 • BradleyFuneralHomes.com  

A green burial through Bradley, Haeberle & Barth allows the deceased to recycle back to the earth without chemical preservation, metal caskets, chemically treated wood caskets and/or outer burial vaults. The family is allowed to be as engaged as they wish to be in the preparation and burial rituals.

 

M. John Scanlan Funeral Home

781 Newark Pompton Turnpike

​Pompton Plains, NJ

973-831-1300 • ScanlanFuneralHome.com

Scanlan Funeral Home offers a full and a basic natural burial package, both of which include the services of the director and staff; sheltering of the deceased up to 48 hours; local transfer from the place of death to the funeral home; and transfer in a hearse to the cemetery, accompanied by the funeral director.


Prout Funeral Home

370 Bloomfield Ave.

​Verona, NJ

973-239-2060 • ProutFuneralHome.com

A green funeral by Prout Funeral Home involves no embalming, and a burial process that ensures the deceased returns to the elements naturally—interred in a shroud, quilt or blanket, or in a biodegradable and sustainably grown casket.

 

Wright & Ford Family Funeral Home and Cremation Services

38 State Highway 31

​Flemington, NJ

908-782-3311 • WrightFamily.com

In addition to providing burial services in accordance with the Green Burial Council, Wright & Ford also provides a catalog for green products such as caskets, urns and shrouds. Its staff can help plan a green celebration of life service.

For more information about the mission and methods of green and natural burials, visit GreenBurialCouncil.org.




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