A few weeks ago, Friends Journal’s poetry editor, Nancy Thomas, included a sweet story at the end of an email coordinating the May selections:
My husband, Hal, stepped out of our apartment and into the hall just before 4:00 p.m. on a Sunday afternoon. He began walking down the hall, playing on his harmonica a zippy version of “When the Saints Go Marching In.” People had been waiting. Doors opened, and our neighbors stood in their doorways — well over the designated six-feet apart — and began waving and greeting one another. This constituted our “call to worship,” and the beginning of a new pattern.
I thought it was so nice that I asked her to expand it. The result is a nice snapshot of how a Quaker-affiliated retirement community in Newberg, Oregon, is adapting to life under COVID-19 restrictions.
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