NEWS

American Buddhist Confederation Donates Ambulance to New York Hospital

From brooklynreporter.com

The American Buddhist Confederation (ABC) donated an ambulance to the Maimonides Medical Center of Brooklyn, New York, on 11 August. The ambulance, a 2020 Mercedes Demers high-top Sprinter van, was part of a US$120,000 donation to the medical center, which includes funds for additional COVID-19 testing and vaccination programs for Chinese communities throughout the borough.

Speaking at the acceptance ceremony, Maimonides Medical Center president and CEO Kenneth Gibbs said: “This generous donation will improve our response and medical transfer capabilities and help our efforts to directly address COVID-19 right here in Brooklyn.” (Brooklyn Reporter)

From brooklynreporter.com

Janice Yang, director of Asian Outreach for the hospital, added: “This funding helps us directly engage with our community and allows us to connect the incredible care we provide with more of our neighbors.” (Brooklyn Reporter)

The ambulance is designated to facilitate the transfer of patients from the hospital’s main campus to its cancer center. Additionally, it will be present when needed at events in the Chinese community, offer educational outreach and health screenings, and transport medical materials.

“We believe that only if we work together and help each other, we can overcome coronavirus and have the final victory in fighting [the] pandemic,” said American Buddhist Confederation president Ming Yu. “Despite the relentless disasters we are facing, our world is filled with love.” (Brooklyn Reporter)

Brooklyn’s borough president Eric Adams, the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, also spoke at the ceremony, saying:

As we look to boost vaccination rates, it is essential that we deploy credible messengers in different communities who speak a language that local residents can understand. This new ambulance, coupled with the funding for testing and vaccines focused on Brooklyn’s Chinese community, are critically needed steps in our fight against this virus that should be replicated across the five boroughs. (Brooklyn Reporter)

From brooklynreporter.com

The ceremony follows a growing track record of the ABC’s commitment to serving their community through supporting health services. 

Last year, Ven. Ming Yu was awarded the Faith Justice Interfaith Award for his efforts to deliver emergency PPE supplies to hospitals in New York City during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a statement on 22 June 2020, the Interfaith Center of New York praised Ven. Ming Yu, noting: “Collectively, your temples brought supplies to numerous hospitals across the boroughs, and you showed great leadership and collaboration with local civic leaders, who stepped in to help as a result of your generosity.”*

Brooklyn, and New York City more broadly, was an early epicenter for the COVID-19 pandemic in the US. The city reported its first death from COVID-19 on 14 March 2020. According to a 1 June 2020 report by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the borough accounted for over 5,560 of the city’s 18,679 official COVID-19-caused deaths, second only to 5,882 lives lost in neighboring Queens. Today, the city, like much of the US, is experiencing a deadly fourth wave of the pandemic due to the highly infectious Delta variant of the novel coronavirus. According to World Health Organization data, the US has had some 36,777,391 coronavirus infections and 671,628 confirmed deaths.

Ven. Ming Yu. From interfaithcenter.org
Ven. Ming Yu. From interfaithcenter.org

American Buddhist Confederation’s Ven. Ming Yu Recognized for Distributing Emergency PPE in NYC (Buddhistdoor Global)

See more

Whats News Breaking: Wednesday, August 11, 2021 (Brooklyn Daily Eagle)
Buddhist group donates ambulance to Maimonides (Brooklyn Reporter)
Contagion of Fear: One month inside a New York hospital as a virus took over the world (Time)
COVID-19 Outbreak — New York City, February 29–June 1, 2020 (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

Related news reports from Buddhistdoor Global

Buddhist Monks on the Frontline as COVID-19 Surges in Thailand
US-Based Buddhist Foundation Launches with US$500,000 Donation for Cambodians Impacted by COVID-19
Buddhist Bhutan Draws Praise for COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout Success
America’s CDC Issues New Guidance for Reopening Communities of Faith
Head of the Jogye Order of Korean Buddhism Blames Greed, Avarice for COVID-19 Pandemic

Related features from Buddhistdoor Global

Buddhistdoor View: International Responsibility is Humanity’s Priority
Buddhistdoor View: COVID-19 Knows No National Boundaries, Neither Should We
The Buddha’s Discourse on Social Distancing
Buddhistdoor View: The Astonishing and Fleeting Opportunity of This Moment

See all pandemic coverage from Buddhistdoor Global

Related features from Buddhistdoor Global

Related news from Buddhistdoor Global

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments