Canadian who died in Cuba was mistakenly buried in Russia, family says
CBC
Faraj Allah Jarjour, a Canadian man who died in Cuba in March, was buried in a Russian town north of Moscow after Cuban government workers mistakenly switched two bodies before repatriating them to the wrong countries, according to his family.
The Jarjour family, who are originally from Syria and now live in Laval north of Montreal, were vacationing in Varadero, Cuba, when Faraj Jarjour, 68, died suddenly while swimming in the ocean March 22.
Weeks later, a coffin that was supposed to contain Jarjour's remains was sent to Quebec by Asistur, a Cuban government agency overseeing medical issues related to travel.
When the funeral service hired by the Jarjours took it to the lab to have him prepared for ceremonies expected to begin last Sunday, the technicians discovered the man in the coffin looked nothing like the picture his family provided.
"We realized it was impossible that it was Mr. Jarjour. It was the wrong body," said Patrice Chavegros, the vice-president of Athos, a company owning 30 funeral homes in the province.
The cadaver in front of them had a full head of hair, tattoos and looked 20 years younger. It was not Jarjour, who had no hair and was born in 1956 in Syria. He and his family fled war there, landing in Quebec in 2016. Jarjour had made a career as a florist in Aleppo.
Jarjour's children, Miriam and Karam, spoke to several media outlets over the past week, hoping to get answers about where their father could be, and when would they finally be able to bury him.
Wednesday, Cuban Foreign Affairs Minister Bruno Rodriguez made a post on social media apologizing for the situation and saying Cuban authorities were "investigating to clarify the incident."
Later that day, Chavegros said he received information that Jarjour's remains had been sent to Russia and that those of a Russian man were sent to Canada instead.
It was unclear at that point whether the Russian family who received Jarjour's body was aware of what had happened.
But Miriam and Karam Jarjour say Canadian government officials, who are in touch with them every day, have now confirmed that their father was buried in Russia.
In a video interview from their parents' home in Laval, Miriam Jarjour shook her head recounting the news.
"They're going to un-bury him and send him to Canada," she said. "It's not a good situation, but we don't have a choice. It's not in our control. We can only be patient."
Karam Jarjour said he was relieved to at least now know where his father's remains are, thanking the Canadian government for its efforts.