Diagouraga looks up from his father's plot at the freshly-dug graves
alongside. "My father was the first one in this row, and in a year,
it's filled up," he said. "It's unbelievable."
While France is estimated to have the European Union's largest
Muslim population, it does not know how hard that group has been
hit: French law forbids the gathering of data based on ethnic or
religious affiliations.
But evidence collated by Reuters - including statistical data that
indirectly captures the impact and testimony from community leaders
- indicates the COVID death rate among French Muslims is much higher
than in the overall population.
According to one study based on official data, excess deaths in 2020
among French residents born in mainly Muslim North Africa were twice
as high as among people born in France.
The reason, community leaders and researchers say, is that Muslims
tend to have a lower-than-average socio-economic status.
They are more likely to do jobs such as bus drivers or cashiers that
bring them into closer contact with the public and to live in
cramped multi-generational households.
"They were ... the first to pay a heavy price," said M'Hammed
Henniche, head of the union of Muslim associations in
Seine-Saint-Denis, a region near Paris with a large immigrant
population.
The unequal impact of COVID-19 on ethnic minorities, often for
similar reasons, has been documented in other countries, including
the United States.
But in France, the pandemic throws into sharp relief the
inequalities that help fuel tensions between French Muslims and
their neighbours - and which look set to become a battleground in
next year's presidential election.
President Emmanuel Macron's main opponent, polls indicate, will be
far-right politician Marine Le Pen, who is campaigning on issues of
Islam, terrorism, immigration, and crime.
Asked to comment on the impact of COVID-19 on France's Muslims, a
government representative said: "We don't have data that is tied to
people's religion."
FACING MECCA
While official data is silent on the impact of COVID-19 on Muslims,
one place it becomes apparent is in France's cemeteries.
People buried according to Muslim religious rites are typically
placed in specially-designated sections of the cemetery, where
graves are aligned so the dead person faces Mecca, the holiest site
in Islam.
The cemetery at Valenton where Diagouraga's father, Boubou, was
buried, is in the Val-de-Marne region, outside Paris.
According to figures Reuters compiled from all 14 cemeteries in
Val-de-Marne, in 2020 there were 1,411 Muslim burials, up from 626
the previous year, before the pandemic. That represents a 125%
increase, compared to a 34% increase for burials of all confessions
in that region.
Increased mortality from COVID only partially explains the rise in
Muslim burials.
Pandemic border restrictions prevented many families from sending
deceased relatives back to their country of origin for burial. There
is no official data, but undertakers said around three quarters of
French Muslims were buried abroad pre-COVID.
Undertakers, imams and non-government groups involved in burying
Muslims said there were not enough plots to meet demand at the start
of the pandemic, forcing many families to call around desperately to
find somewhere to bury their relatives.
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On the morning of May 17 this
year, Samad Akrach arrived at a mortuary in
Paris to collect the body of Abdulahi Cabi
Abukar, a Somali who died in March 2020 from
COVID-19, with no family who could be traced.
Akrach, president of the Tahara charity that gives Muslim burials to
the destitute, performed the ritual of washing the body and applying
musk, lavender, rose petals and henna. Then, in the presence of 38
volunteers invited by Akrach's group, the Somali was buried
according to Muslim ritual at Courneuve cemetery on the outskirts of
Paris.
Akrach's group conducted 764 burials in 2020, up from 382 in 2019,
he said. Around half had died from COVID-19. "The Muslim community
has been affected enormously in this period," he said.
Statisticians also use data on foreign-born residents to build a
picture of the impact of COVID on ethnic minorities. This shows
excess deaths among French residents born outside France were up 17%
in 2020, versus 8% for French-born residents.
Seine-Saint-Denis, the region of mainland France with the highest
number of residents not born in France, had a 21.8% rise in excess
mortality from 2019 to 2020, official statistics show, more than
twice the increase for France as a whole.
Excess deaths among French residents born in majority Muslim North
Africa were 2.6 times higher, and among those from sub-Saharan
Africa 4.5 times higher, than among French-born people.
"We can deduce that... immigrants of the Muslim faith have been much
harder hit by the COVID epidemic," said Michel Guillot, research
director at the state-funded French Institute for Demographic
Studies.
"WHY ALWAYS US?"
In Seine-Saint-Denis, the high mortality is especially striking
because in normal times, with its younger than average population,
it has a lower death rate than France overall.
But the region performs worse than average on socio-economic
indicators. Twenty percent of homes are over-crowded, versus 4.9%
nationally. The average hourly wage is 13.93 euros, nearly 1.5 euros
less than the national figure.
Henniche, head of the region's union of Muslim associations, said he
first felt the impact of COVID-19 on his community when he began
receiving multiple phone calls from families seeking help burying
their dead.
"It's not because they're Muslims," he said of the COVID death rate.
"It's because they belong to the least privileged social classes."
White collar professionals could protect themselves by working from
home. "But if someone is a refuse collector, or a cleaning lady, or
a cashier, they cannot work from home. These people have to go out,
use public transport," he said.
"There is a kind of bitter taste, of injustice. There is this
feeling: 'Why me?' and 'Why always us?'"
(Additional reporting by Noemie Olive and Elizabath Pineau, Writing
by Caroline Pailliez and Christian Lowe; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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