3.9 C
Ottawa
Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Body of Canadian who died in Cuba and was mistakenly buried in Russia has returned home

Date:

Montreal

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

More than two months since Faraj Jarjour died while vacationing in Cuba, his body has been returned to Quebec, a friend of the family has confirmed. 

Family to receive condolences this weekend, funeral services slated for next week

CBC News

·

A bald man sitting on a couch smiling with his two children on either side

Faraj Jarjour, middle, and his two children, Karam, left, and Miriam, right, before he died in Cuba in March. (Submitted by Miriam Jarjour)

More than two months since Faraj Jarjour died while vacationing in Cuba, his body has been returned to Quebec, a friend of the family has confirmed. 

Jarjour, 68, was swimming when he died of a heart attack on March 22. His body was supposed to have been repatriated by a Cuban government agency.

But, several weeks later, when the funeral home in Laval, Que., brought the casket to a lab to have Jarjour prepared for his funeral, the person inside looked nothing like the picture the family provided.

Jarjour’s children, Miriam and Karam, spoke to several media outlets, hoping to get answers about where their father could be, and when would they finally be able to bury him. 

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.” 

Ultimately, the family learned the body was buried in a Russian town north of Moscow after Cuban government workers mistakenly switched two bodies before repatriating them to the wrong countries.

Cuba has said it would reimburse the $10,000 it cost the family for the repatriation.

Family friend Anas Fransis said the family will receive condolences on Sunday in Montreal, and a funeral will be held on Tuesday in Laval.

He said the body had deteriorated significantly, but technicians were able to make Jarjour presentable for an open casket service.

The family is relieved, Francis said, but they are still struggling with grief over the incident. He said they are speaking with a lawyer about seeking financial compensation from Canadian and Cuban authorities.

Jarjour is survived by his wife of 35 years, Dina Ghoulam, and his two children.

WATCH | CBC spoke with the family after the mistake was discovered: 

He died on vacation in Cuba. The wrong body was sent to Canada

The family of a man who died while on vacation in Cuba is trying to track down Faraj Jarjour’s remains after the body of a different man — that didn’t resemble Jarjour — was sent back to Canada. The family says they’ve received no answers about how the mixup happened or where Jarjour’s body is.

Written by Isaac Olson

know more

Popular

More like this
Related

Why gold is a better bet than stocks for 2025

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Nvidia’s stunning 2024 return has all the makings of a stock-market dynasty

Please enable JS and disable any ad blockerknow more

Microsoft introduces PC that has one job: connect users to their computers in the cloud

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella watches from the audience during...