The Coffins are waiting

In the municipality of Rizal, Palawan, death is a deeply communal affair.

But unlike in cities where funeral parlors line highways and embalming services are a phone call away, families in this remote town navigate grief without the comfort of such conveniences.

Here, when someone passes away, whether in the coastal barangays or the mountainous sitios, the first call is not to a funeral home, but to the local government unit (LGU).

This town, located in the southern corridor of Palawan, has no private funeral homes. This absence has forced the LGU to take on a role that goes far beyond governance, it has become the town’s sole funeral provider. Through its Municipal Social Welfare and Development Office, the LGU provides free coffins and embalming services, a program vital to many residents who cannot afford to outsource death care, even if such services were available.

In Barangay Punta-Baja, this small structure sits quietly on the roadside of Purok Liwayway. It resembles a chicken coop at first glance, wood-framed, mesh-covered, and modestly built, but a closer look reveals something more solemn: a stockpile of white wooden caskets, neatly stacked and protected from the elements.

Above them hang tarpaulins printed with messages like “Libreng Kabaong at Balsamo”—Free Coffin and Embalming. It is not just a storage shed. It is a community lifeline.

Rizal’s geographic isolation has long posed challenges for basic services, and funerary care is no exception. The town’s upland and far-flung barangays, places like Ransang, Candawaga, and Panalingaan, are difficult to access, especially during the rainy season when rivers swell and muddy paths become impassable.
When someone dies in these areas, relatives either inform the barangay captain or travel for hours to reach the municipal center. From there, the LGU steps in.

Through a partnership with a local provider, AG Soldivo-Ledesma Funeral Services, the municipal government arranges for embalming, often dispatching workers to perform the procedure in the deceased’s home or barangay hall.

Once embalmed, the body is placed in a donated coffin and prepared for burial according to the family’s religious or cultural rites.

Transporting the coffin to the deceased’s home is another hurdle. If vehicles can no longer reach the site, volunteers or family members carry it by hand, trekking over hills, crossing rivers, and maneuvering narrow trails for hours.

Still, for many, the help is deeply appreciated.

Rizal’s residents are not homogenous in their ways of mourning. The town’s religious landscape is a tapestry of Roman Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, and indigenous animist beliefs.

According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, over 69% of Palaweños identify as Roman Catholic. In Rizal, this percentage is bolstered by years of missionary presence, though Muslim communities also live in several barangays.

Evangelical churches, Iglesia ni Cristo, and Seventh-day Adventist’s maintain congregations, especially in urban centers like Punta-Baja.

However, in the uplands, among the Palaw’an tribes, traditional beliefs still shape death practices.

Ceremonial rites such as “basal,” a ritual involving music and offerings to spirits, are held to help the dead journey into the afterlife. Some families blend Christian rites with tribal customs, creating uniquely syncretic funerals.

In these cases, the LGU-provided coffins become more than just government assistance, they are the vessels through which ancestral traditions continue, even in the face of poverty and logistical barriers.

This small roadside coffin shed in Punta-Baja may not inspire awe. It doesn’t resemble the solemn marble halls of city funeral homes in cities or other towns, nor does it offer air-conditioned chapels or glossy urn displays. But it reflects something profound — a community that has learned to grieve with dignity, even in scarcity.

It is not just the responsibility of government that’s visible here, it is the resilience of the people. Families do not wait for outsiders to rescue them from grief; they rely on one another, on barangay leaders, on social workers, and yes, even on small wooden structures housing simple white boxes.

For now, the LGU’s modest program stands as a stopgap, a human effort to honor life at its end.

And so, when the road ends in Rizal, and grief begins, people know where to go. Not to a business, but to a government office, and eventually, to this small yellow shed by the road. Here, the final journey begins.
Exit mobile version