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Washington National Cathedral Donates 5,000 Medical Masks Resurrected from Crypts

  • Paul O'Donnel Religious persecution, missions, Christianity around the world
  • Published Mar 26, 2020

(RNS) — The Washington National Cathedral will donate thousands of medical masks to two hospitals in the nation’s capital after discovering a trove of the much-needed protective equipment just feet from where Helen Keller and other prominent Americans lie in the cathedral’s underground crypts.

Bought in 2006 as a precaution during an outbreak of the H5N1 flu, also known as bird or avian flu, the more than 5,000 N95 respiratory masks had been forgotten until early this month, when the cathedral’s chief stonemason, Joseph Alonso, remembered coming across them in an unfinished area of the crypt level.

Though still in their original packaging, the masks were technically expired, and cathedral staffers first reached out to the manufacturer and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to determine whether they were safe to use.

Since the coronavirus pandemic hit the U.S. last month, mass buying of N95 masks has resulted in a critical shortage at medical centers. Doctors across the country have been reusing masks, along with medical gowns and eye shields, risking spreading the disease to multiple patients or contracting it themselves.

Given the dire situation, Kevin Eckstrom, the chief communications officer at the cathedral, said they were told the decade-old masks “were either fine or better than nothing.”

On Wednesday (March 25), 3,000 masks will be donated to Georgetown University Hospital and 2,000 will go to Children’s National Hospital in Washington.

When the cathedral reached administrators at the two hospitals, they asked, “How quickly can you get them to us?” according to Eckstrom.

The cathedral kept “fewer than a couple hundred” masks, said Eckstrom, for their original purpose: for clergy to wear when visiting vulnerable people who need pastoral care, for cathedral cleaning staff or for staffers dealing with the public during a viral outbreak.  

While best known to the public as the stage for funerals for presidents and other high officials, most recently the December 2018 state funeral for President George H.W. Bush, the cathedral is also an Episcopal parish with some 1,400 congregants.

“We are not doing many pastoral visits at the moment because of health concerns,” said Eckstrom. “But if they had to do last rites (a sacramental anointing of the sick) they want to be suited up as best they could be.”

This is not the cathedral’s first encounter with the pandemic. The bishop of Washington, Mariann Edgar Budde, was among several Washington clergy who self-quarantined after attending a conference in Louisville, Kentucky, with the pastor of Christ Church in Georgetown, who contracted COVID-19. Budde has since been tested for the virus and declared healthy.  

Nor is this the first time Alonso, the stonemason who found the masks, has made headlines. A 35-year veteran of the cathedral’s staff, Alonso was integral to the $32 million restoration project that followed a 5.8 magnitude earthquake in 2011. He also placed the final stone on the cathedral when it was officially completed in 1990, after being commissioned in 1893 and begun in 1907.

His latest newsmaking turn, however, was less ceremonial.

“Joe is always crawling around every part of the building and knows every nook and cranny,” said Eckstrom. “If anyone was going to find them, it’s him.”

READ THIS STORY AT RELIGIONNEWS.COM.

Article originally published by Religion News Service. Used with permission.

Photo courtesy: Religion News Service/Danielle E. Thomas/Washington National Cathedral