Acadian funeral rites, mourning explored at New Brunswick Museum - Action News
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New Brunswick

Acadian funeral rites, mourning explored at New Brunswick Museum

The exhibit Always Loved, Never Forgotten: Death and Mourning in Acadia captures funeral rites including death announcements, mourning apparel and embalming, among other traditions in plenty of time for Halloween.

While spooky, subject matter in exhibit is intended to spur thought-provoking discussion

The exhibit opening at the New Brunswick Museum on Thursday encompasses funeral rites from mourning traditions and death announcements, to mourning dress and embalming, (Muse Acadien de lUniversit de Moncton)

Notlong ago, Maritimersconfronteddeath "more frequently in their daily lives," said Deborah Robichaud, guest curator of the exhibit Always Loved, Never Forgotten: Death and Mourning in Acadia.

The exhibit opening Thursdayat the New Brunswick Museum encompasses funeral rites, deathannouncements, mourning appareland embalming, as well as"the elaborate traditions around mass, hearses, the cultural role of the cemeteryand tombstone design," said Robichaud.

The subject matter, while dark, is key to preserving for posterity Acadian end-of-life traditions that would otherwise fall into obscurity.

"There was a big change in customs with the advent of cremation, and we were in danger of losing touch with the older traditions," said Robichaud.

Evolving funeral rites

A cross incorporating the hair of deceased family members is one of the artifacts displayed in the Always Loved, Never Forgotten: Death and Mourning in Acadia exhibition opening at the NBM Thursday from 5-7 p.m. (New Brunswick Museum)
The collection was developed bytheMuse Acadien and late last year,the New Brunswick Museum'sconservator, Dee Stubbs-Lee, did some conservation work on a piece central to the display a memento mori, which isanobject kept as a reminder of the inevitability of death, such as a skull

One piece, believed to have been made in a Prince Edward Island convent, incorporates locks of hair from family members into a floral borderand the image of a weeping willow leaning over a grave marker.

Another memento moriisa large wax cross that belonged to a family in Caraquet. Itincorporates the hair of two dozen deceased family members. The piece was restored with assistance from the New Brunswick Museum.

The subject matter, while dark, is key to preserving for posterity Acadian traditions that would otherwise fall into obscurity. (Muse Acadien de lUniversit de Moncton)

"We don't have a lot of pieces with hair worked in," says Muse Acadien curatorJeanne Mance Cormier. "Something this elegant was a surprise to us. It's something we haven't seen before in Acadian culture."

"We celebrate life when people pass away differently than we did in the past," said Cormier. She saidin the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, "You have a bit of superstition, but you also have respect for the person who passed away."

Post-mortem photos

Angel at the Cross tombstone, a sculpture that once stood in the cemetery at Memramcook, NB, was inspired by the 1763 hymn "Rock of Ages." (Muse Acadien de lUniversit de Moncton)
Visitors to the exhibit can also flip through albums of post-mortem photos images captured of loved ones after death. Such photos, Robichaud explains, were commonplacebefore photography became ubiquitous. Often, such images would be the only surviving images of a loved one.

"The traditions around death have been really sanitized," she said. "People don't die in their homes anymore. They mostly die in hospitals, and the remains are removed and cremated. So not everyone gets a chance to see that someone has passed away and create that finality."

In addition to capturing Acadian end-of-life traditions, the object of the exhibit is also to spur important conversations.

"One of the things that museum exhibitions should do is get people talking," saidCormier.

As visitors leave the collection, they can cast an anonymous votewith a marble for an urn, or a coffin. She saidmany Moncton museum-goers said the exhibit allowed them to discuss end-of-life issues they'd never previously talked about with their family.

"Death is such a great finality. We all experience it. But I wanted to look at the intricacies of Acadian culture, and at Catholicism, because they are intertwined," said Robichaud. "We wanted to capture some of these traditions before they were completely lost."

Always Loved, Never Forgotten: Death and Mourning in Acadia opens at the New Brunswick Museum tomorrow eveningwith an eventscheduledfrom 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.

With files from Information Morning Saint John