⁍ At a convent near Detroit, 13 nuns have died of COVID-19.
⁍ The toll is seven at a center for Maryknoll sisters in New York, and six at a Wisconsin convent that serves nuns with fading memories.
⁍ Each community perseveres, though strict social-distancing rules have made communal solidarity a challenge as the losses are mourned.
– The number of US nuns who have died from the H1N1 strain of influenza this year has risen to 37, reports the AP, with 13 of those deaths occurring at the Felician Sisters convent in Livonia, Mich. “The yearnings, throughout the pandemic, were to be with our dying sisters and hold our traditional services, funeral Mass, and burial, to comfort each other,” says Sister Mary Christopher Moore, a leader of the Felician Sisters of North America. For weeks the Livonia nuns went without Mass and dined in shifts, only one per table. Those and other restrictions have eased in recent weeks as regular activities slowly resume. But strict social-distancing rules remain in effect at the Our Lady of the Angels convent in Greenfield, Wis., which provides memory care for nuns of the School Sisters of St. Francis and the School Sisters of Notre Dame. Nearly all communal activities have been suspended since March, and the 40 remaining residents are not allowed to see visitors. “The changes are confusing for the sisters—the loss of their religious activities has been very difficult, with no Masses or daily Rosary in chapel,’ says a rep for the School Sisters of St. Francis. “They do not understand the virus and find it difficult to stay confined to their rooms.’ At the Maryknoll Sisters’ center in Ossining, NY, as at the Greenfield convent, there have been no new coronavirus cases in recent weeks. “Thank God things are stable,” says a Maryknoll rep.
Source: https://apnews.com/a3155e87ad8a6ad00d3f600bad91bcf1