Italian priest recalls COVID-19 'nightmare' of coffin-filled church
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[March 15, 2021]
By Alex Fraser and Philip Pullella
SERIATE, Italy (Reuters) - On the wall of
St. Joseph's Church hangs a black-and-white photograph with a caption
remembering when the Italian parish of Seriate gave 270 people emergency
"hospitality" last year - coffins of the dead from COVID-19, sometimes
up to 40 at a time.
The hosts were Father Mario Carminati, 65, and Marcello Crotti, 46, who
opened up the church to give the deceased a dignified temporary place of
rest so they would not have to wait in a warehouse for burial or
cremation.
"For me it was a nightmare, but I didn't have the opportunity to think
about it a lot because when you find yourself in the middle of an
emergency you have to rush and act according to your instinct,"
Carminati, the senior priest in Seriate, said.
A year ago, the COVID-19 pandemic in northern Italy was spiralling and
the province of Bergamo, where Seriate is located, was one of the
hardest hit.
Hundreds of people were dying each day, most funerals were banned,
burials and cremations were backed up and the dead had nowhere to go but
into storage.
"The pandemic was devastating for the community because the town became
a place of silence, with (only) the noise of the ambulance sirens
passing by. It became a place of death, sadness, mourning," he said.
The coffins arrived one by one in hearses or pickup trucks from homes or
hospitals and were lined up on the marble floor. A family member brought
in an occasional rose and whispered a hasty farewell.
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Father Mario Carminati, who is responsible for the churches in
Seriate, the small town near Bergamo where a year ago many coffins
of people who died from coronavirus disease (COVID-19 ) were pilling
up in a local church and taken away by military trucks, poses for a
photograph, in Seriate, Italy, February 28, 2021. Picture taken
February 28, 2021. REUTERS/Flavio Lo Scalzo
The caption of the photo on the wall reads: "The parish community of
Seriate remembers the hospitality given to 270 deceased people from
all over Bergamo province ... Our welcoming in the house of the Lord
was intended to be a caress of prayer in the name of the families."
When about 30 or 40 coffins had accumulated, Carminati and Crotti
blessed them with holy water. Then soldiers using fork lifts loaded
them onto army trucks and military convoys took them away as
residents cried from windows.
It was death on an industrial scale, something which only war
chaplains can expect in their pastoral work.
"Consoling so many families created a great sadness in my heart,"
Carminati said, after celebrating Mass recently in one of Seriate's
other churches.
A year on, nearly 3,500 people have died of the disease in Bergamo
province so far, several hundred in Seriate.
"The wound will heal only slowly," said Carminati, who lost two
nephews aged 34 and 36 to COVID-19. "It will take time for this pain
to become a memory."
(Reporting by Alex Fraser in Seriate and Philip Pullella in Rome;
Additional reporting by Emily Roe in Rome; Writing by Philip
Pullella; Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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