We have a seen a "green" movement make its way into our every day lives, in our products, businesses, and even our drinks! Today people are more conscious about the earth we live in, and there is more of an urge to take care of it. There is an effort to make whatever we can more of a green processes, and we have seen that take affect in the funeral industry as well.
What Is a Green Burial?
Green burial is a simple and natural alternative to resource-intensive contemporary burial or
cremation. The deceased is laid to rest in the earth using only biodegradable materials and without
a vault or toxic embalming, in a woodland or other natural setting, often with a fieldstone or
indigenous plant marking the grave. This practice can be used as a conservation tool, enabling the
acquisition, restoration, and stewardship of natural areas. Simple natural burials were prevalent for
thousands of years (and still are in many parts of the world, including in traditional Muslim and
Jewish burials) before the contemporary funeral industry propagated the standard of expensive and
elaborate funerals divorced from natural processes.
As the world has become increasingly concerned with climate change and environmental
degradation, the role that our funeral and burial practices play in these matters has gone largely
unaddressed.
The typical American-style funeral — with a casket made of precious wood or metal, a concrete
vault, a large marble or granite monument, and embalming — is incredibly resource-intensive, and
it has become common in much of the world. In the U.S. alone, approximately 33 million board feet
of mostly virgin wood, 60,000 tons of steel, 1.6 million tons of reinforced concrete, and 5 million
gallons of toxic embalming fluid are put into the ground every year. Further, the large tracts of land
that conventional cemeteries occupy are typically covered in turf grass in need of constant
maintenance in the form of mowing, watering, and the application of chemicals. Cremation,
sometimes misconstrued as a green alternative to conventional burial, consumes a large amount of
fossil and other fuels, and as the body is burned at high temperatures, particulate pollution, CO2
(approximately 110 pounds per cremation, on average), and toxins such as dioxins, furans, and
mercury are released into the atmosphere.
The burgeoning green burial movement seeks to change these conventions — not only by greatly
reducing resource use and pollution, but also by using burial as a conservation strategy to protect
and restore natural areas. In addition to these environmental benefits, the cost of a green burial is
often much less than that of a conventional one. Furthermore, green burial offers many the solace
of knowing that they will remain within the cycle of life.
Created over the course of four years, A Will for the Woods documents the movement’s progress by
focusing on some of its key figures, including Joe Sehee of the Green Burial Council; Kimberley and
Dr. Billy Campbell, founders of the nation’s first conservation burial ground; and Dyanne
Matzkevich, who is saving a tract of forest within her conventional cemetery by turning it into a
green burial ground. The film’s main focus, however, is the story of Clark Wang and Jane Ezzard.
Faced with the possibility of Clark's imminent death, they find beauty and comfort in the
environmental and spiritual significance of green burial.
Wang asks the questions, what if our last act could be a gift to the planet? Determined that his final resting place will benefit the earth, musician and psychiatrist Clark Wang prepares for his own green burial. While battling lymphoma, Clark has discovered a burgeoning movement that uses burial to conserve and restore natural areas, forgoing contemporary funeral practices that operate at the ecosystem's expense. Boldly facing his mortality, Clark and his partner Jane have become passionate about green burial, compelled by both the environmental benefits and the idea that one can remain within the cycle of life, rather than being cut off from it. The spirited pair have inspired a compassionate local cemetarian, and together they aim to use green burial to save a North Carolina woods from being clear-cut. Making the most of the time that he has, Clark finds joy in his music and dance, connection with his friends and family, and great comfort in the knowledge that his death, whenever it happens, will be a force for regeneration. The film follows Clark's dream of leaving a loving, permanent legacy, and environmentalism takes on a deeply human intimacy. Documenting one community's role in the genesis of a revolutionary movement, A Will for the Woods draws the viewer into a life-affirming portrait of people embracing their connection to each other and to timeless natural cycles.
Check out the trailer for this inspiring documentary!
A Will for the Woods - Official Trailer from A Will for the Woods on Vimeo.
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