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Orthodox churches quiet They were among the last to join ban on large gatherings Church, which serves all of southeast Nassau County, including Seaford and Wantagh, fell The call and response of the silent as a community after its hymns reverberated through the last public liturgy on March 22, church on the evening of March as New York’s ban on gatherings 25, icons peering of more than 50 was down from the walls extended to religious on the priest in his organizations. The shining Lenten Orthodox Church robes of purple and was the last major gold brocade, a scene denomination to that has been repeatcease holding public ed for more than a services. thousand years. The parish was In place of the directed by Archusual Wednesdaybishop Michael evening Commu(Dahulich), head of nion liturgy, howevthe Diocese of New er, the Rev. Martin York and New JerKraus, of Holy Trinsey, and Metropoliity O r t h o d o x THE REV. tan Tikhon (MolChurch in East lard), archbishop of Meadow, was lead- MARTIN KRAuS Washington, D.D. ing an 1,100-year-old Pastor, and primate of the s e r v i c e c a l l e d a Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Paraklesis with a America, to obey all Orthodox Church new theme: supplicivil authorities in cating the Virgin deciding its course Mary for relief from the COVID- for the coming weeks. 19 crisis. Archbishop Elpidophoros, One other significant differ- head of the Greek Orthodox ence: The church was empty, Archdiocese of North America, except for Kraus’s wife, Matush- echoed Metropolitan Tikhon. ka Dennise Kraus, who filled the “I’m staying at home,” he said in dual role of canonarch, or mas- a YouTube broadcast to church ter of ceremonies, and choir. H o ly T r i n i t y O r t h o d ox Continued on page 5
By TIMoTHY DENToN tdenton@liherald.com
I
Courtesy Christopher Carini
Businesses will look to new leader Newly elected Seaford Chamber of Commerce President Nick Bilotta, center, knew he was in for a bumpy ride at his installation on March 5, but he is determined to help amid the coronavirus crisis. Story, photo, Page 9.
Some store supplies dwindle as COVID-19 crisis frays nerves By TIMoTHY DENToN tdenton@liherald.com
“Do you have a voucher for that yogurt?” The clerk at the Wantagh supermarket asked the question facetiously. Yogurt wasn’t being strictly rationed last weekend, although like many stores, this one had a two-item limit on all identical merchandise — even 3-ounce tins of cat food. Paper goods continued to be
almost completely absent from the shelves, although napkins started to reappear here and there. One Levittown grocer was sold out of prepackaged meat products like hot dogs, bologna and other cooked, ready-to-eat products, and those same items were in short supply in other locations. To deal with shortages, residents have begun sharing sources of their supplies in ways not seen since the 1940s. One Sea-
ford resident was willing to divulge her secret savior — the retail grocer that still stocked everything she needed — only on the condition that its name not appear in print. Over-the-counter cold and flu products dwindled at pharmacies in Seaford and Wantagh as residents began stocking up on them as well. Because of the extreme shortage of hospital Continued on page 3
’m grateful we’re already streaming our liturgy, that we already have all the equipment in place.