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HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS COMMUNITY MEMORIAL DAY A Flag, a Flower, a Moment of Memorial This coming Memorial Day (Monday, May 25), NYC Veterans Alliance joins United War Veterans Council, NYC Department of Veterans’ Service, and NYS Division of Veterans’ Services in asking YOU to help us remember America’s fallen throughA Flag, a Flower, a Moment of Memorial. Public commemorations of Memorial Day have been cancelled in NYC, but we can come together virtually by sharing images and memories online. You can participate by taking a photo of an American flag and a flower and reflect on the meaning of the holiday with your family and friends. We welcome you to share stories of the servicemembers and veterans laid to rest who you are thinking of on this solemn day. You may also choose to share your thoughts on memorials or historic sites you’re thinking of as we take a day to commemorate those who gave all in America’s military conflicts. Please use the hashtag #FlagFlowerMemorial and share your image and thoughts on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, or LinkedIn. Help us fill social media with memories and meaning on Memorial Day.

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Veterans Mutual Aid - NYC Metro Since mid-March, veteran volunteers and NYC Veterans Alliance staff have been helping veterans and their families with the realities they’re facing during this pandemic. Whether it’s an emergency hotel stay when housing programs fail, or nutritious groceries when they’re too expensive or unavailable, or help with overdue essential bills, or just a knowledgeable, friendly fellow veteran to check in with -- we want to be there for you. Please go to our resource page and let us know what you need https://www.nycveteransalliance. org/covid Veterans Mutual Aid . � �-, f J .- = - . • • r . , 64 � . . I /' - ,.,,,,,,,.,· ' 1 r · · • f • • � I ,. , t_ , , ' -· • ..1 https://www.nycveteransalliance.org/ covid

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Adriano Espaillat, Community Leaders Hold Food Distribution at NYCHA Grant Houses Amid COVID-19 Recovery O n May 18th Representative Adriano Espaillat (NY-13) and local community leaders distribute food to seniors at NYCHA Grant Houses, located at 1295 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY 10027.

“As communities around the global face ongoing challenges due to the coronavirus, our efforts to provide relief and recovery must first address the needs of the most vulnerable among us,” said Rep. Adriano Espaillat (NY-13). “Our collaborative efforts to hold the food distribution at NYCHA Grant Houses is part of the ongoing efforts to ensure residents, seniors and families have access to food and other resources as our community continues to respond to the COVID-19 crisis.”

SWAB ONLY:

NYC Health & Hospitals at Saint Nicholas Houses — 218 West 127th (FDB/ACP): accepts walk-ins, but NYCHA residents take priority, Call 844-NYC-4NYC for more info

Ryan Health Center — 2381 Frederick Douglass (128th), 888-364-3065, monfri 9 a.m.-noon, 1-4:40 p.m.

Institute for Family Health / Family Health Center of Harlem — 1824 Madison (119th), sat-sun: no walk-ins but call in advance to make an appointment at 844-NYC-4NYC

NYC Health & Hospitals / Sydenham — 264 West 118th (FDB/ACp), 212-932-6500, monfri 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m.: accepts walk-ins

Harlem COVID Testing Sites

Convent Avenue Baptist Church — 420 West 145th (convent/st. nick): appointment info pending

Mount Neboh Baptist Church — 1883 Adam Clayton Powell (114th/115th):, appointment info pending

ANTIBODY ONLY:

Manhattan - ville Renaissance Health Center — 21 Old Broadway (126th/129th): Make an appointment online here, those without internet access can call 888-279- 0967

“I am elated to collaborate with Congressman Adriano Espaillat and would like to take this opportunity to express my sincerest gratitude to him for his tireless efforts to serve the people of his congressional district. I share his mission to elevate our collective humanity, regardless of race, religion, nationality, status or ethnicity,” said Ameera Amir, Adjunct Professor, Columbia University and social entrepreneur. “A heartfelt thank you to the senior residents of Harlem’s Grant Houses for their kindness the countless times I walked by as a graduate student at Columbia University nearly a decade ago and now that I teach at the University. I am humbled and honored to be able to return the kindness and to help provide groceries to residents of Grant Houses during this time of need. I am appreciative to Cesar Ramirez, owner of C-Town on 125th and to all who helped with this effort.”

Above information provided by Uptown Grand Central.

The Black crisis in the midst of the coronavirus crisis Pandemic brings years of healthcare disparities to the forefront

By Lisa Fitch, OW Editor-in-Chief D r. Maulana Karenga, chair of the Depart ment of Africana Studies at CSU Long Beach, wants the Black community to make sure that physical distancing during the pan demic does not interfere with relationships or establishing networks.

“We’ve got to shop for each other, we have to pick up prescriptions for each oth er,” Karenga said. “We’ve got to talk; we’ve got to share in formation, so we don’t have to be afraid unnecessarily.”

Karenga was recently featured on the Carl Nelson Show and conducted a phone conference with Nelson and his radio audience at WOL radio in Washington, D.C.

“There’s no real denying of the damage and destruc tion that this coronavirus has done to our lives,” Karenga said. “We can’t even worship in the same way anymore.”

During the show, Karenga admitted that there is a lot of fear and confusion out in the world now, and he warned against buying into the con spiracy theories which can pit persons against each other. He also expressed his dismay with the information the government issues to the public.

“They don’t have cultur ally competent messages for us,” Karenga said, claim ing that at least 46 percent of coronavirus victims are Black. “Even though Black people are in the emerging hot zones… Chicago, De troit, Milwaukee, New Orleans…we lack the ethnic data. Who’s tested positive? Who has died? We don’t have any of that.”

Former President Barak Obama agreed, raising the issue at a virtual meeting with mayors, local leaders and members of response teams from around the world. “When you start looking at issues of domestic abuse and you start looking at racial dis parities that are popping up in your cities, paying attention to that is the kind of leader ship I know all of you aspire to,” Obama said. “You have to be intentional about these issues.”

Rep. Karen Bass (CA-37), chair of the Congressional Black Caucus holds frequent town hall teleconferences on various subjects. “Healthcare disparities in our country have been a long-standing is sue and concern for the Congressional Black Caucus,” Bass said. “The spread of the coronavirus has compounded these issues, leaving Black people even more vulnerable. We need to urgently address these disparities with a target ed response to our community.” “It’s not that [Blacks are] getting infected more of ten,” said Dr. Anthony Fauci during a recent With House briefing. “It’s that when they do get infected with their un derlying medical conditions — diabetes, hypertension, obesity, asthma – those are the kind of things that wind them up in the ICU and ulti mately death.”

Fauci says the pandemic is shining a bright light on the healthcare disparities which have always existed in the country and added that ef forts to limit these disparities should resume after this glob al crisis. “Early data on deaths show that no group is immune from COVID-19,” said Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti in his recent news briefings. “We need every community to understand this can affect you. No matter what commu nity you live in or come from, this can affect you.”

“Long-term racial dispari ties still exist,” Garcetti said. “The effect it has on commu nities can be disproportionate.”

“We are the people who survived the holocaust of slavery,” Karenga noted. “We have no business thinking we cannot handle this.”

Vol. 25, No 21 May 21, 2020

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