Las Vegas Review-Journal

With heavy hearts, Italians marked one year of the outbreak.

Residents pay tribute to dead with memorials

- By Luca Bruno

CODOGNO, Italy — With wreath-laying ceremonies, tree plantings and church services, Italians on Sunday marked one year since their country experience­d its first known COVID-19 death.

Towns in Italy’s north were the first to be hard-hit by the pandemic and put under lockdown, and residents paid tribute to the dead. Italy, with some 95,500 confirmed virus dead, has Europe’s second-highest pandemic toll after Britain. Experts say the virus also killed many others who were never tested.

While the first wave of infections largely engulfed Lombardy and other northern regions, a second surge starting in the fall of 2020 has raced throughout the country. The number of new coronaviru­s infections has remained stubbornly high despite a raft of restrictio­ns on travel between regions, and in some cases between towns.

In addition, gyms, cinemas and theaters have been closed and restaurant­s and bars must shut early in the evening. There’s a 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. nationwide curfew.

So far, Italy has confirmed

2.8 million cases.

It was in the hospital at the Lombard town of Codogno where a doctor recognized what would go down in medical history as the first known COVID-19 case in the West in a patient with no links to the outbreak in Asia, where coronaviru­s infections initially emerged. The diagnosis was made on the evening of Feb.

20, 2020, in a 38-year-old otherwise healthy, athletic man.

Near the Red Cross office in Codogno on Sunday, Lombardy’s governor and the town mayor attended a ceremony to unveil a monument to COVID-19 victims. The memorial consists of three steel pillars, representi­ng resilience, community and starting over. A wreath was laid, and townspeopl­e stood in silence to honor the dead.

“Panic, total panic,” was how one of Codogno’s 15,000 residents, Rosaria Sanna, on Sunday remembered what she felt at the start. And a year later “I am still scared because it is not over yet.”

Some of her fellow townspeopl­e lit candles during the morning Sunday Masses in Codogno’s St. Blaise Church.

The Codogno hospital patient survived, after being transferre­d to another hospital and spending weeks on a respirator.

But it was in the northeaste­rn town of Vo, in the neighborin­g Veneto region, where Italy’s first known COVID-19 death was registered on Feb. 21, 2020. The 77-year-old Vo man was a retired roofer who liked to play cards.

In Vo’s memorial ceremony, officials planted a tree. A plaque has been installed, quoting a line from the Italian poet Ugo Foscolo, whose works are widely studied by the nation’s schoolchil­dren. The inscriptio­n reads: “A man never dies if there is someone who remembers him.”

 ?? Luca Bruno The Associated Press ?? Authoritie­s unveil a memorial for COVID deaths Sunday in Codogno, northern Italy. The first case of locally spread COVID-19 in Europe was found in the small town of Codogno one year ago. So far, Italy has confirmed 2.8 million cases.
Luca Bruno The Associated Press Authoritie­s unveil a memorial for COVID deaths Sunday in Codogno, northern Italy. The first case of locally spread COVID-19 in Europe was found in the small town of Codogno one year ago. So far, Italy has confirmed 2.8 million cases.

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