The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Quarantine­d Ga. woman: We are ‘like a pariah’

After returning from a trip to China, a Fort Valley mother and her children are quarantine­d for two weeks in Miami.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

The prison sentence for the Jackson family is almost over.

DaVina Jackson, a resident of Fort Valley, and her two children escaped from China last week.

When they arrived at her mother’s condo in Miami, a public health nurse suggested that they stay inside for two weeks, though the confinemen­t wasn’t compulsory.

That didn’t matter to Jackson, 45. “We have not gone anywhere and don’t plan to until the quarantine is over,” she said this week. “Everyone is treating us like a pariah, which is hurtful because we have never shown any signs of illness and have been locked away from everything and everyone.”

That quarantine, during which they’ve been visited periodical­ly by health officials to check their “temperatur­e log,” will be over next Wednesday. After that, Jackson hopes to return to Georgia. “We are long overdue for some Southern hospitalit­y,” she said.

Jackson traveled to China last summer to teach English to preschool students. She brought along her children, JeNaii, 13, and JeKaii, 9, with the hope that they would benefit from experienci­ng a new culture and a new language.

And, in fact, it was a great experience for them until the COVID-19 outbreak turned Nanjing, China, into a ghost town.

Officials at Jackson’s place of work told her there was nothing to worry about, but she didn’t accept their reassuranc­es, staying in her Nanjing apartment for more than a month while she struggled to find a flight out of China.

With countries closing their borders, that exit was difficult. She finally secured passage to South Korea last week, leaving behind everything but the clothes they could pack into their suitcases. The tickets cost $5,000, which Jackson would have been unable to pay without the help of a GoFundMe account.

At Nanjing airport security, she and her children went through the most intense inspection she’s ever experience­d. A team of eight officers removed everything from her suitcases and examined every item minutely, including Jackson’s hair. Onboard the airplane, stewards measured her temperatur­e, which was elevated, because every part of her body was covered in layers of clothing. “I didn’t want a single thing to show.”

When the group finally arrived in Miami, Jackson’s Chinese cellphone failed to work, so she simply showed up at her mother’s condo unannounce­d. It was 4:30 in the morning. Luckily her mother, Deborah Brown, was awake, reading her Bible.

Quarantine is yet another boring seclusion, she said. Jackson doesn’t even go out on the balcony, because her mother is concerned about the neighbors’ reaction to seeing a quarantine­d visitor outside. “Every couple of days (the public health nurses) check in to see if we’re healthy,” said Jackson. “We have temperatur­e logs, and they provided us with a thermomete­r.”

Brown was simply grateful to see her daughter and grandchild­ren again. “I really kept thinking I would never see her again, the way you hear the news here,” she said.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY DAVINA JACKSON ?? DaVina Jackson (right) of Fort Valley and her children, daughter JeNaii (left) and son JeKaii (center), returned from China last week. They are seen here at her mother’s house, where they are waiting out the two-week quarantine period, during which they’ve felt like social outcasts.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY DAVINA JACKSON DaVina Jackson (right) of Fort Valley and her children, daughter JeNaii (left) and son JeKaii (center), returned from China last week. They are seen here at her mother’s house, where they are waiting out the two-week quarantine period, during which they’ve felt like social outcasts.

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