Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly collection during which NPR’s worldwide staff shares moments from their lives and work all over the world.
Six years in the past within the spring, as COVID-19 circumstances grew in distant China, Britain was torn between sealing the nation off and letting every day life proceed its stressed hum. For individuals who lived by it, these weeks — and the following months — had been a wierd state of upheaval.
Immediately, that collective expertise is etched into London’s panorama. Raised by abnormal residents in 2021, the 1,640-foot-long Nationwide Covid Memorial Wall stretched alongside the financial institution of the River Thames, instantly reverse the Parliament, as if holding vigil over the nation’s corridors of energy.
On a latest go to, I took a stroll alongside that mural, the place greater than 1 / 4 million hand-drawn hearts represented all of the lives misplaced to the coronavirus — and the ache of these left behind. “Dad, our hero. Liked and missed,” wrote Amanda and Andy. “Our greatest good friend,” they added. “My much-loved mom, Sylvia Renton, 1926-2021,” learn one other coronary heart.
Britain entered its first COVID lockdown on March 23, 2020. However what ensued additionally included a collection of scandals that jolted a public nonetheless uncooked with grief and confusion: the prime minister’s “partygate,” the well being secretary’s workplace affair caught on CCTV digital camera, and controversies over the procurement of non-public protecting tools.
That’s the reason this wall issues.
A protracted, unbroken line of hearts beating defiantly in opposition to forgetting. It’s a memorial in addition to a mirror. It honors the useless whereas reminding these in energy throughout the river of the price of their missteps.
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