Western cities pay unique tribute to health workers

PARIS-At a time of isolation, people in many European cities hit hard by the novel coronavirus are taking at least a minute each night to come together in gratitude.
They stand at open windows or on balconies in Rome, Madrid, Paris, Athens and Amsterdam, singing, cheering and applauding even though they know their intended audience is too busy to listen.
The adulation is for the doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers putting themselves at risk on the front lines of the pandemic that is forcing most residents to stay home. On Thursday a 52-year-old nurse became the first medical professional in Spain to die of COVID-19.
In Italy, 2,900 healthcare providers, or 10 percent of the country's total, have been infected.
In Netherlands its health minister collapsed from exhaustion in the midst of a parliamentary session on Wednesday.
"We're clapping tonight out of respect and to say thank you to all the healthcare workers in the Netherlands who are protecting us against this horrible coronavirus," King Willem-Alexander said while observing the ritual on Tuesday night with his family at Palace Huis ten Bosch in The Hague.
In France, where the head of the national doctors' federation picked up the virus from a patient, the call went out seemingly spontaneously by text messages hours after a nationwide lockdown went into effect on Tuesday.
"In this period of crisis, we are going to see the most beautiful things humanity has to offer," French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said.
In Brussels and other cities, the intended audience for the nightly chorus of thanks was expanded to everyone working to keep essential services running in Belgium, such as firefighters, supermarket workers and garbage collectors.
In Spain people are singing Monica Naranjo's popular cover of the disco-era tune "I Will Survive" with the lyrics tweaked to say, "I will survive/I'll look for a home/Among the rubble of my loneliness/Strange paradise/Where you are missed."
Workers at one hospital responded with a video recorded in the corridors. Standing in a small group and wearing masks, they held up one sign after another with messages that included, "We are all in this together." Then they gave a minute of applause for their homebound admirers.
Agencies via Xinhua

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