Boston Herald

Hospitals, churches honor COVID victims

- BY ALEXI COHAN

Boston hospitals, churches and universiti­es honored the lives lost to coronaviru­s by lighting their buildings in amber on Tuesday as part of a national COVID-19 memorial hosted by the Presidenti­al Inaugural Committee.

“This memorial is a moment to remember the lives tragically lost and their loved ones, and it’s a reminder that we need to continue to remain vigilant to stop the spread in our communitie­s,” said David Sweeney, president and CEO of the Medical Academic and Scientific Community Organizati­on.

Eight MASCO members including Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Brigham and Women’s Hospital all lit up their buildings Tuesday night for the vigil.

Grant African Methodist Episcopal Church in Roxbury also joined the memorial by having 25 volunteers shine a flashlight on the church.

The congregati­on has been honoring Massachuse­tts residents lost to coronaviru­s with ribbons since the pandemic began. Rev. Pedro Castro Jr. said on Tuesday there were 13,705 ribbons on the church.

“This is how Roxbury can say that we remember these precious lives that lived and contribute­d to their families and to the society themselves,” Castro said.

He added, “I think it will bring greater peace to our community.”

Castro said the memorial also represents a traumatic year in politics and support for the new Biden administra­tion.

“We are all in this together and I really believe we are going to build America back better,” Castro said.

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 ?? NAncy LAnE pHOTOS / HErALd STAFF ?? IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Roberta Young Jackson joins other parishione­rs at Grant AME Church in Roxbury, using flashlight­s Tuesday to light up COVID ribbons outside the church.
NAncy LAnE pHOTOS / HErALd STAFF IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Roberta Young Jackson joins other parishione­rs at Grant AME Church in Roxbury, using flashlight­s Tuesday to light up COVID ribbons outside the church.

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