metro » o n the cover Crossing The Line Augustinus works on fixing his grandparents’ graves. Fence encroaches on graves in Chesterfield cemetery. Danny Schwartz JN Intern W hen most of us envi- sion a final resting place for our loved ones, we tend to think of well- kept grass and colorful flowers amid a tranquil cemetery — a pleasant place to come and spend some time. We don’t picture what Norm Augustinus, bestselling writer of novels Cats and Dogs and Bedbadger, saw in May when he went to Union Cemetery with his niece Rosie Augustinus to visit the graves of his grandpar- ents. Norm found the graves of Steve and Bessie Melnyk, his Jewish grandparents, vandalized, their headstones on the ground. He looked around and realized the entire cemetery had been neglected. Augustinus had gone to both grandparents’ burials when he was a kid and then didn’t visit Union Cemetery again for some time. “I was told by family mem- bers that the cemetery appeared to be abandoned from the late 1990s through 2012 or so,” Augustinus said. “I went there, only to find that they were correct, the cemetery had turned into an unmain- tained, overgrown jungle — you couldn’t even get to the grave or even find a headstone as it was completely buried in overgrowth as were many, many others. Booze bottles, beer cans, ciga- rette butts were everywhere; it had turned into a totally differ- ent cemetery. “A neighbor there recently told me there were ongoing ‘out-of-control wild parties’ held in the cemetery weekly. Family members called and complained again and again, and eventu- ally the city chopped everything down and it is what you see now.” Augustinus, a Michigan Augustinus and his niece did the best they could to fix up the graves. The city lifted the fence off the ground, the only thing they’ve done so far. native, graduated from Ferris State University. He moved to New York, then briefly lived on Peaks Island in Maine before returning to Michigan in May. He now resides in Shelby Township. He was recently nom- inated for the Carnegie Medal of Honor for pulling two children from a smoking overturned vehicle on I-75 last year. “I went to work on my grand- parents’ grave when the stone was off and lying on the fence,” he said. “Other headstones were lying in wrong places as well, and the weeds hadn’t been cut and the grass was really high. We did the bricks over; we removed the stone.” It was too much work for one visit. He and Rosie left and came back the next week to continue working on the graves. As he was leaving the cemetery, he realized something disturbing: The fence near the entranceway seemed way too close to the headstones. “As we kept coming and leav- ing, I realized that many of these people’s graves are on the other side of the fence. Literally, almost half their coffins are under a fence,” he said. Augustinus stretched out in front of a headstone where the casket would be near the fence and used a tape measure to con- firm his beliefs. “A vault is 90 inches long,” he said. “After I measured, I knew the caskets were definitely rest- ing under the fence.” Ralph Zuckman, executive director of Clover Hill Park continued on page 16 14 August 18 • 2016