Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Blue low-key funeral

Blue low-key funeral

Lan, a female student from the University of British Columbia (UBC) who died mysteriously in the hotel, held a low-key funeral in Vancouver last Saturday (20 13) and was buried in the Forest Lawn Funeral Home in Bennaby. About 50 or 60 relatives and friends attended the ceremony. After the funeral, many relatives and friends in China couldn't help crying.

Lan Keer's funeral was held in granja Fen Memorial Church. Around 9 am, people from the flower shop company sent wreaths one after another. One of them inserted a wreath of white chrysanthemums and pink carnations and wrote the words "in memory of Lin Yilian" to express the grief of relatives and friends.

It is reported that there is a big screen TV at the entrance of the mourning hall with blue photos and birthdays printed on it. At 10: 30 in the morning, relatives and friends came to offer their condolences. Many of them are young people around the age of 20, most of them are Chinese, and two or three of them are Hispanic. The rest of the participants are mostly middle-aged people from China.

A China girl in her twenties who came to attend the farewell ceremony said that she was a friend of Lan. She said that Chloe was very kind to people before her death, but somehow she died suddenly. She said that this incident put a lot of pressure on Lan's parents and kept them awake at night.

Another middle-aged man in China who asked not to be named said that he had known Lan for many years, and attending her funeral made him feel very heavy, so he didn't want to say more.

The farewell ceremony lasted about 3 hours, about 1 in the afternoon. Three black hearses carried Lan Keer's coffin and her family from the funeral home to Cosland Cemetery in Bennaby. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon, Lan's relatives and friends gathered in the cemetery to prepare for the burial ceremony. In order to avoid disturbing the ceremony, the funeral home staff asked the reporter to leave the scene.

Many celebrities have been buried in the 48-year-old Coslan Cemetery, including Shen Dianxia, a famous Hong Kong artist, He Shutong, a photographer, and Lu Le, one of the four former Hong Kong detectives.