Jamaica Gleaner

Clergyman: More to social distancing

- Christophe­r Serju/Gleaner Writer

GENERAL SECRETARY of the Jamaica Baptist Union, Reverend Karl Johnson, in supporting the National Days of Prayer and Fasting which started at 6 p.m. yesterday and will run until 6 p.m. tomorrow as declared by Governor General Sir Patrick Allen, has called for more attention to be paid to promoting the merits of social distancing as a vital tool in helping to curb the spread of the deadly novel coronaviru­s (COVID-19).

Social distancing is an establishe­d distance which people are expected to keep between themselves and others while socialisin­g, close enough to allow for communicat­ion but not near enough for the transmissi­on of an infectious disease from one person to the other. Reverend Johnson is concerned that while this precaution­ary measure is absolutely necessary, the way it is being promoted leaves a lot more to be desired.

“If I were actually advising the Government and other shapers of influence, I would tell them that more needs to be done about the dimension of social distancing as it relates to affirming the common good. What is happening is that people are more using it as selfpreser­vation tactic that can descend into a kind of self-centrednes­s or selfishnes­s, if it’s not an enlightene­d approach,” he told The Gleaner.

Reverend Johnson said that the way social distancing is being promoted might have led to the reported incident of a man being beaten and thrown off a bus, after he sneezed a number of times. Passengers rained blows on him before forcibly evicting him from the vehicle, despite the insistence of the driver that he had always known the man to bothered by bouts of sneezing.

“So it’s a kind of rabid, insular self-preservati­on which really isn’t at the heart of social distance. There is a dimension of it which needs to be given more visibility – that I am not doing it only for myself but also for others, to help in reducing the spread. We say it but I don’t think it is being ramped up enough – the aspect that I am doing it for the common good of humanity, beyond self.”

Meanwhile, in declaring the proclamati­on, Sir Patrick encouraged, “All Jamaicans to continue reflection and prayer making this a time of soul-searching and embracing moral, ethical and social responsibi­lity, even after the passage of this pandemic”.

 ??  ?? Members of the Ministry of Health & Wellness as well as Jamaica Constabula­ry Force at the residence of the 79-year-old male patient whose death marked the first COVID-19 related death in Jamaica.
Members of the Ministry of Health & Wellness as well as Jamaica Constabula­ry Force at the residence of the 79-year-old male patient whose death marked the first COVID-19 related death in Jamaica.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica