

The Cathedral
in Manhattan, the largest Anglican Cathedral in the world, is the seat of the
Diocese of New York.
New York
City, under pressure with coronavirus cases, is planning to construct another
temporary hospital in the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine.
The City is
looking up to the church as hospitals are running out of room for coronavirus
patients.
Alternatives
such as the USNS Comfort and temporary hospitals in a convention centre and
Central Park are proving not to be enough.
According to
Anglican.ink, the tentative plan is to set up about 400 hospital beds this week
in the nave of the cathedral on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
Whether the
cathedral will handle COVID-19 cases has not yet been decided.
But it should
be accepting patients within 10 days, said Lisa Schubert, the cathedral’s vice
president of programming and external relations.
“Everything
is happening in real time,” Schubert told Episcopal News Service.
“What we knew
a week ago is very different from what we know now.”
The cathedral
is partnering with the Mount Sinai hospital network and Samaritan’s Purse, the
Christian relief organisation.
The
Samaritan’s Purse has set up temporary hospital units in Central Park.
“Use of this
sacred space could lessen pressure on New York City’s overburdened health care
system, allowing hospitals to devote more care to COVID-19 patients,” the
cathedral’s staff said in a statement.
“In the
history and tradition of the church, and following the example of Jesus,
cathedrals have long served as places of refuge and healing in times of plague
and community crisis,” the Rt. Rev. Clifton Daniel III, dean of the cathedral,
said.
“The
Cathedral of St. John the Divine is stepping up now, as we always have, to help
support our diverse and beloved community and the community of doctors, nurses
and volunteers risking their health and well-being in the service of the people
of New York City in our hour of need.”
By 6 April,
the virus had killed at least 2,475 people in New York City, and the death toll
will soon exceed that of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the city that
killed about 2,700.

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