Los Angeles County will host an online ceremony Wednesday to mark the burial of 1,780 people who died in 2018 but whose remains went unclaimed by relatives or loved ones.
Supervisor Janice Hahn, who will speak during the memorial, asked that Tuesday’s meeting of the Board of Supervisors be adjourned in memory of the dead.
“The ceremony is part of a commitment that the county has upheld since 1896 to ensure that everyone in Los Angeles County, no matter their means, is laid to rest with respect and dignity. They may have left this world alone, but they were one of us,” Hahn said, her voice breaking and quavering, “and our responsibility to honor their lives and grieve their deaths falls to us.”
Last year’s interfaith remembrance was also virtual due to health concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The virtual service, which begins at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 1, will include the Lord’s Prayer in English, Spanish, Vietnamese and Ukrainian and prayers, songs and blessings by a rabbi, an Imam, a Native American sage and chaplains from several Christian denominations. View the program here.
It will be live streamed on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/events/424531369300503/.
The individuals to be honored at the Los Angeles County Crematory and Cemetery died in 2018. The county generally holds the cremated remains for three years before burial to allow family members and loved ones a chance to claim them. The ashes were placed in a single mass grave a couple of days earlier and a marker indicating the year of cremation will be placed atop the plot.
Family members searching for deceased loved ones can call the county Office of Decedent Affairs/Morgue at 323-409-7161 or the Medical Examiner’s Office, 323-343-0512. The cost of cremation may be waived for families facing financial hardship.
UPDATE: View video of the virtual service below.