New York Pastor Mourns 44 Parishioners Who Died Of Coronavirus

Pastor Fabian Arias, or Padre Fabian, of Saint Peter's Church, conducts a Memorial Mass for Raul Luis Lopez, a delivery person that died of Corona Virus, in Corona, Queens, on May 9, 2020, during the pandemic in New York. Padre Fabian, as he is known, has been conducting mass from home via online services, and has lost 43 of his congregants to COVID-19. Close to 3,000,000 people have tested positive for Covid-19, with another 190,000 officially listed as dead, worldwide. In New York, an epicenter of the virus, City, State and National emergency emergencies have been declared. New Yorkers must stay indoors unless exercising or buying supplies, risking $1000 fines for failing to ‘Social Distance’. Gatherings of 10 or more have been banned. Restaurants and bars must only serve take out, and companies have closed their offices, sending workers to work from home. Economic reverberations from the virus will be felt for far longer than the virus itself, with the market already having fallen to historic lows since the beginning of the outbreak. Fears of recession are reverberating throughout governments and banks, some of whom have put economy ahead of public health. (Photo by Ashley Gilbertson / VII Photo)

Write Comment

New York Pastor Mourns 44 Parishioners Who Died Of Coronavirus

A New York pastor tells CNN his devastating tally of 44 parishioners who have died of coronavirus since the middle of March, just a couple of weeks after the first COVID-19 case was confirmed in the state.

Rev. Fabian Arias, of Saint Peter’s Church in Manhattan, shared a list with the outlet, showing dozens of his parishioners names on it and warning that he fears there will be more added. Rev. Arias is also presiding over their funerals, with some being hosted in family members’ living rooms due to the influx at funeral homes.

RELATED: New York City Coronavirus Death Toll Surpasses 20,000

Of the 44 deaths in his parish, which were a mix of regular goers and sporadic, holy day attendees, nearly ninety percent of them are Latino, and many are undocumented immigrants. He adds, “The virus installs itself more in the most vulnerable places, and so it infects the most vulnerable people. This is the problem. The virus does not discriminate. We are the ones who as a society are discriminating.”

Another church leader, Bishop Paul Egensteiner, of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, tells Americans who don’t believe in the severity of the pandemic, “You have to be in a very privileged place to be able to say that. You either have blinders on, or it’s an acute lack of awareness of how this virus is devastating communities.”

RELATED: New York ER Director Who Treated COVID-19 Patients Commits Suicide

Ariela Anís: Ariela Anís is your fav Panamanian music aficionado and HU Rockstar! She not only contributes to social media, but is also a senior writer and produces 'The Jason Lee Show' and 'The Jason Lee Podcast.' She previously produced the now-defunct 'Hollywood Unlocked with Jason Lee' podcast, iHeartRadio show and Fox Soul TV show; plus, HU's live YouTube show 'Gagging with Jason Lee.' Connect on Instagram: ari.anis | Twitter: arielaanis