Baltimore Sun Sunday

‘Invisible Hands’ brings out best from Gen Z during crisis

- By Leanne Italie and Jessie Wardarski

NEW YORK — Liam Elkind’s big heart and his break from college was a highlight of 83-year-old Carol Sterling’s week.

The retired arts administra­tor has been sheltering at home during the coronaviru­s outbreak, unable to shop for herself. Yearning for fresh food, she found the 20-year-old through their synagogue, and soon he showed up at her door with a bag full of salad fixings and oranges.

Elkind, a junior at Yale, and a friend, Simone Policano, amassed 1,300 volunteers in 72 hours to deliver groceries and medicine to older New Yorkers and other vulnerable people. They call themselves Invisible Hands, and they also provide human contact and comfort at a safe distance.

On Tuesday, Elkind and Sterling met for the first time over her paper bag of groceries outside her 15th-floor apartment on the Upper West Side. It was a moment of “tikkun olam” between the two congregant­s of the progressiv­e and servicemin­ded Stephen Wise Free Synagogue.

The Hebrew for “world repair” is a phrase synonymous with the notion of social action.

“It’s neighbor to neighbor,” Sterling said. “A crisis like this often brings out the very best.”

Elkind, the son of a doctor, has watched his father and other caregivers working tirelessly in crisis.

“I figured, OK, I can go buy some groceries. That I can do.”

Elkind and his fellow volunteers take the name of their project from their vigilance in maintainin­g social distance from the people they serve, and their meticulous care while shopping and delivering.

Grocery and pharmacy orders are placed on the Invisible Hands website. Shoppers must not have traveled out of the country for the virus’ 14-day incubation period, have any symptoms of COVID-19 or have come in contact with anybody who has tested positive.

They must pledge that they have practiced social distancing and other safety measures in their own lives before signing on. They wear gloves while shopping, wipe down bags they’re delivering and use self-checkout when possible.

Bags of goods are left at doors, and cash can be exchanged the same way, or directly to a store or through a digital transactio­n. Volunteers make a point to pause and chat as they deliver.

The effort started on Facebook. Policano, also a New Yorker, put out a call for volunteers. Word spread quickly as they built a website and distribute­d flyers in seven languages.

“It’s gone from extremely casual to extremely operationa­l very quickly,” Elkind said. “This is one of those times when I remember that New York is such a small town, and people are willing to look out for one another and have each other’s back.”

Elkind said volunteers have offered to extend Invisible Hands to Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington — even London.

“It’s been really exciting just to see that amount of interest and how many people there are in this world who want to do good and are looking for ways to do that,” he said. “This is a 24/7 operation right now.”

Sterling was more than a little grateful. “When we look back a lot of good things are going to come out of this,” she said of the crisis.

 ?? JESSIE WARDARSKI/AP ?? Liam Elkind, 20, selects a bag of oranges Tuesday at a supermarke­t in New York City.
JESSIE WARDARSKI/AP Liam Elkind, 20, selects a bag of oranges Tuesday at a supermarke­t in New York City.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States