Miami Herald

Buying masks, delivering food: Teens step up in pandemic

- BY JAMIE STENGLE Associated Press

DALLAS

In the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic, communitie­s across the country have discovered a powerful resource that has stepped forward to make a difference: America’s teenagers.

They have delivered groceries to older adults, offered online tutoring, emailed sick children, helped feed the hungry. And then there are those like 15-year-old Valerie Xu, who raised money to buy masks to donate to a Dallas hospital and homeless shelter.

Xu began raising funds in March. She was alarmed that some health care workers were having trouble getting masks, and dishearten­ed to hear about unfounded animosity directed at Asian Americans over the virus that was first detected in China.

The response, she said, helped restore her optimism, and left her “very inspired.”

In Cupertino, California, 17-year-old Nelson Mu and fellow high school students started teaching online classes to younger children after schools closed in the spring. More than 2,500 kids from across the U.S. are now taking the free virtual courses on everything from math and science to art and dance, taught by a couple hundred teens through the organizati­on YAPA Kids.

“People want to make a positive change,” Mu said. “That actually makes me extremely optimistic for the future.”

Early on in the pandemic, friends Dhruv

Pai, 16, and Matthew Casertano, 15, of Silver Spring, Maryland, realized that they were both

groceries to their grandparen­ts. They decided to reach out to friends to do the same for other older people who were self-isolating.

Teens Helping Seniors now has more than 650 volunteers nationwide and in Canada making free deliveries. The pandemic, Pai said, “has reignited the spirit of volunteeri­ng in our generation and within our community.”

Casertano said it has been rewarding to get to know the people receiving the grocery deliveries.

“It also provided a way for us to feel like we were making a difference in the world at a time when this pandemic was sort of disconnect­ing us from everyone else,” he said.

Xu started raising money to buy masks in March, when supplies were scarce in the United States. Xu has relatives China, a major manufactur­er, and figured out that she could get quality masks from suppliers there at a good price. She found some whose products were approved by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and enlisted her Mandarin-speaking mother’s help to reach out to them.

Xu has so far has raised more than $23,000, which includes more than $12,000 from donations on her Godeliveri­ng

FundMe page, a

$10,000 match from a company and $1,200 she contribute­d from her own savings. The 52,600 masks she’s purchased so far include surgical, FFP2 and three-layer varieties.

The first donation was in April to the UT Southweste­rn Medical Center in Dallas, followed by another in June to the same hospital and to a homeless shelter, where staff and clients alike wear them.

Dr. John Warner, execin utive vice president for health system affairs at UT Southweste­rn, said donations like Xu’s not only helped supplement their stock while the supply chain replenishe­d, but also gave staff a much-needed morale boost.

Warner said it has been encouragin­g to see how many young people are pitching in.

“They’re so bright and so innovative,” he said, “so that’s been very fun to watch.”

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ AP ?? Valerie Xu, 15, has raised more than $23,000, which paid for 52,600 masks for UT Southweste­rn Medical Center and a homeless shelter.
TONY GUTIERREZ AP Valerie Xu, 15, has raised more than $23,000, which paid for 52,600 masks for UT Southweste­rn Medical Center and a homeless shelter.

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