ISR COVID-19 Blog

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Institute for Social Responsibility COVID-19 Blog Perspectives

Experts at Bereavement? 28th May 2020 Rev John Davis a F ollowing bereavements;

series of family including my father, mother and only brother over a 2-year period, my elder daughter responded very positively when I said she was coping very well. ‘Dad’, she said, ‘we have become experts at bereavement!’ Notwithstanding, I required counselling having been devastated by my losses; she is now a prescribing community nurse for a Children’s hospice. As a young curate I conducted over 25 funerals on the Crematorium duty rota in my first month in post. These were for people from all over the region; I met the grieving family at the door of the crematorium and tried to conduct a meaningful service with no prior knowledge of the deceased or their family! Later, working in urban parishes, I experienced many deaths and funerals; babies, pupils and parents in my children’s school, those of my family, close friends and members of my church. The most traumatic experience was being asked to switch off life support for a 7-year-old child with staff and family present. Visiting London following the death of Princess Diana I was dragged unwillingly to Kensington Palace to look at the “amazing” sea of flowers outside. I found myself in tears, not at all because of the flowers but because of the young princes and the family, friends and staff left bereft behind those walls.

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Dealing with the death of loved ones and the fear that brings has been cast to the forefront of our minds triggered by this dreadful virus that the whole world is facing. For well in excess of 35,000 families along with multitudes of friends and colleagues in the UK, bereavement and all of its pain has become a stark reality as it was during wartime. What positives can be drawn from this tragedy? Hopefully the much-needed advances in science to bring about a vaccine. For me, I have known through all of my pain, some amazing doctors, nurses, carers, friends and many broken but beautifully hospitable and grateful families who I know would rush to support me in times of trouble. I have stared death down and prayed as someone acquainted with pain and preached about a Saviour who was tortured and died but rose again still with the wounds to bring eternal hope and reassurance. Without this I would have lost hope long ago; death cannot have the last word! Bereavement is woven into the fabric of all our lives; what is there for those of us left to cope post Covid-19? To be thankful for family or friends lost and those who cared for them. To do what they would want in remembering them and moving forward to bring hope, justice, renewal and much needed change in our world for the future. This planet is a precious resource and is being squandered and stripped of life. I may be an expert in bereavement but I hope that the premature loss of so many loved ones is a catalyst for a better world that values every human life.

Rev John Davis of ‘Together Liverpool’ and the Church Urban Fund is an ISR Visiting Fellow.


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Returning to ‘normal’: Better or Worse for those with special need and/or disabilities?

2min
page 51

To the Moon and Back: Summing up the ISR/EHU Covid-19 Blog

10min
pages 53-56

Staging Apocalypse: Endgame, by Samuel Beckett

2min
page 52

Covid-19: Liberation from the Clock (for some

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page 50

Listen up! Schools have always been much more than places for Education

2min
page 49

Experts at Bereavement?

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page 48

Covid-19, Higher Education and the rise of video-based learning

2min
page 47

Streaming and CGI? The future of TV and Film after COVID-19?

2min
page 44

Can the new Labour Leadership Rise to the Challenge?

2min
page 46

Creative Resilience and going OFFLine during Lockdown

2min
page 45

Covid-19: Hollywood’s Next 9/11?

2min
page 43

Towards a ‘Next Normal’: HE and Reflection at Speed

2min
page 42

Epidemics: A View from Italy

2min
page 41

Covid-19: An Opportunity for Nature and Outdoor Education

2min
page 40

Emerging from Lockdown: Shared Experience as we (re)commune together

2min
page 39

How to Stay ‘Engaged’ at a Distance: Youth Work and COVID-19

2min
page 35

Everyday Creativity: Why the Arts need to Rethink What Matters

2min
page 38

Coming Out” and Covid-19

2min
page 36

Flattening the Acceptance Curve: Transitioning a more Inclusive World after COVID-19

2min
page 34

Pandemics, Prohibition and the Past: COVID-19 in Historical Perspective

2min
page 33

We Make the Road by Walking: A ‘Kinder’ Society after COVID-19?

2min
page 37

Constructing a ‘New Normal’: What Changes when it’s all over?

2min
page 32

The Road to Nowhere? Tourism after Covid-19

3min
page 31

COVID-19 and Child Abuse in Institutions

2min
page 30

Citizen Science to tackle Poor Air Quality post COVID-19

3min
page 29

Images in the Head; the Pervasiveness of Dreaming in Isolation

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page 28

Dig where you stand: Histories of where you live in a Global Pandemic

2min
page 27

Blitzed by Myths: The ‘Spirit’ of the Blitz and COVID-19

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page 26

New Realities? New Culture? What next for HR post Covid-19?

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page 25

Temporary or Fixed? Changing Business Models in a Global Pandemic

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page 24

An Outcome of the Coronavirus Outbreak

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page 23

Re-imagining a ‘Good Society’ in the wake of COVID-19

2min
page 22

Lockdown and Educational Inequality: Some Reflections

2min
page 21

Coronavirus and Calais refugees: How can you stay safe without soap?

2min
page 20

Wither Fake News: COVID-19 and its Impact on Journalism

2min
page 19

COVID-19: Lockdown when you are Locked Up

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page 17

Ministry without the Ministered: Reflections from a Vicar in Lockdown

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page 16

In Troubled Times, Philosophy CAN Help

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page 18

COVID-19 & the (dis)proportionate case for lockdown

3min
page 14

Who Needs Society? Authoritarianism and COVID-19

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What future for the politician’s ‘Direct Address’?

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COVID-19 lockdown: What are the implications for individual freedom?

2min
page 13

Fingerprints, DNA and Policing Powers during COVID-19

3min
page 9

What is the new ‘normal’? Autism, Routine and Covid-19

3min
page 11

Lockdown 2020 – The Impact on Social Care

1min
page 8

Hannah Arendt: A Theorist for Troubled Times

2min
page 10

Back in the USSR: C-19 and the Normalising of a Surveillance State

2min
page 3

The Arts and COVID-19: A Time of Danger and Opportunity?

2min
page 7

Where is the Balance – Democracy in the Lockdown

4min
page 6

Is it kindness that matters?

7min
pages 4-5
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