From the DW:
“Germany mourns 100,000
COVID-19 dead”
Germany has become the latest
country to pass the sad threshold. According to figures from the country's
Robert Koch Institute, 100,000 people have now died of COVID-19. Behind every
number is a name, and a person. A year ago, Kerstin lost her 83-year-old father
to COVID-19. "I'm sure he knew that we were there," she said, telling
DW of his final days in a hospital bed. "Even if I was only able to stroke
his forehead with my gloved hand." Kerstin lives in Düsseldorf — 600
kilometers (about 370 miles) from her parents, who were based in Berlin.
Despite the virus' infectiousness and strict social distancing restrictions,
the hospital called to say a final visit was possible. To Kerstin, the oldest
daughter, the choice was clear. "I at least wanted to say goodbye to my
father," she said. With her son, she got in her car and drove to Berlin to
spend 10 minutes with him. "We were head-to-toe in plastic," she
remembered. Her father died the next day. He had been taken into hospital with
tuberculosis and only contracted the coronavirus later, probably from a doctor
who was treating him. Now he is one of Germany's 100,000 people — according to
figures from the Robert Koch Institute for Disease Control — who has since
officially died from the illness. Kerstin's memories prompt laughter and tears,
as she recalls her father's life and the randomness of his death. Caregivers
have also suffered. Nurses have been struggling in the pandemic, seeing people
being put on ventilators with their health deteriorating. "We're all
afraid of dying," caregiver Rita Kremers told DW. One of her colleagues
died from the virus in the ICU, she said, six weeks after infection. "It
really hits you when it's a person you knew who dies," she said.
Commemorating the COVID dead Germany
has already held an official commemoration event to honor its COVID-19 dead,
with President Frank-Walter Steinmeier meeting with families of victims in
April. At that point, the death toll was just over 70,000. Weeks later, he made
remarks as the number climbed to 80,000. Back in January, German President
Frank-Walter Steinmeier asked citizens to place a light or a candle in their
windows in memory of Germany's coronavirus victims. Steinmeier said the lights
intended to "show compassion at a dark time." "The burden
of the pandemic is exhausting and we struggle with finding the right way
forward. That's why we need a moment to pause," he said at the time. Other
communities have found their own ways to mark the personal and national
tragedy, with some towns planting memorial trees in cemeteries for their dead.
"The sympathies of the entire city go out to all those left behind and
especially those who couldn't be with their loved ones in their final
hours," Stephan Keller, Düsseldorf's mayor, wrote in a message at one such
memorial event. Experts have been helping people to deal with death and
dying. "We shouldn't just think about the 100,000 dead, but also those who
died from loneliness in the first wave. Or those who died because a cancer
treatment had to be postponed," Dirk Pörschmann, director of the Museum
for Sepulchral Culture in the central city of Kassel, told DW. "It has to
be dealt with very sensitively. It's about upholding a person's dignity after
death," said Dietmar Preissler, collection director at Bonn's Haus der
Geschichte, which has been gathering pandemic-related items for the museum.
A funeral director's
helplessness Fabian Lenzen, a fifth-generation undertaker in Berlin,
remembers the "huge sense of helplessness" in the early months of the
pandemic. He had to work carefully with those who died of the virus, but
"reasonable protective clothing" made the risk
"manageable," he said. The pandemic has stretched his role
running a funeral home. "How do I deal with family members? What's
possible and what isn't? How do I tell them that it isn't possible to say
goodbye," Lenzen said. "We aren't ministers. But we've filled that
role all the more just by doing our normal secularization work."
Individual tragedy, felt by
everyone Those who do have a pastoral role, such as Hanover's evangelical
bishop, Petra Bahr, confront these questions regularly. Every death is "on
one hand a history and on the other a life cut short," she said,
describing the rising COVID death toll as "outrageous." "We've
almost gotten used to just coolly noting it," said Bahr. "Numbers
don't die. People die." Even as death touches more and more people —
everyone from pregnant women to young fathers, she said — "it seems to
interest us less and less, even as this death is connected to more and more consequences,
and more and more misery, suffering and destroyed lives." Historians
like Preissler think the pandemic will have a long-term effect on the country.
Just like Black Death in the Middle Ages or the 1918 flu pandemic, COVID-19
"will also influence society," he said. For all the loss, the cold
reality is that there is more death to come. As Germany mourns its 100,000
dead, it is also bracing for another long winter and a fourth wave of
infections.
^ Sadly, Germany has reached this
death milestone that so many other countries have also reached with Covid. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-mourns-100000-covid-19-dead/a-59908221
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