美洲瘟疫中的多米尼加人:1873-1879年田纳西州孟菲斯黄热病流行期间的天主教事工

J. Vidmar
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摘要

摘要:19世纪70年代,黄热病在三次无法预料的流行中侵袭了田纳西州的孟菲斯市,给人类和城市带来了毁灭性的破坏。其中一个不为人知的故事是天主教牧师和宗教人士留下来照顾病人和垂死的人,这种英雄主义使45名成员失去了生命。多米尼加的男男女女发现自己身处漩涡之中,在疫情中心为一个教区、两所女子学院和一所孤儿院服务。他们没有像其他许多人那样逃离这座城市,而是留下来,适应了普遍死亡和痛苦的现实,把学院变成了医院,保护甚至转移他们照顾的孤儿,并帮助圣彼得教堂成为对病人进行圣礼和身体护理的中心。一位多米尼加牧师在三次流行病中都幸存了下来,并在一名勇敢的非洲裔维修工的陪同下,全程记录了事件的进展。在黄热病肆虐的年代,天主教的故事,尤其是多米尼加人的故事,在很大程度上是不为人知的,或者更糟的是,被忽视了。对他们的工作和牺牲的认可使我们对“美国瘟疫”有了更全面的了解。
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Dominicans in the American Plague: Catholic Ministry During the Yellow Fever Epidemics in Memphis, Tennessee, 1873–1879
Abstract:Yellow fever visited Memphis, Tennessee, in three unforeseen epidemics during the 1870s, bringing human and civic destruction. One of the epidemics’ untold stories is the Catholic priests and religious who remained to tend to the sick and dying—a heroism that cost forty-five members their lives. Dominican men and women found themselves in the maelstrom, serving a parish, two female academies, and an orphanage in the epidemics’ epicenter. Rather than flee the city, as so many others did, they remained and adapted to the realities of widespread death and suffering, turning academies into hospitals, protecting and even moving orphans under their care, and helping St. Peter’s Church become the focus of sacramental and physical care for the stricken. One Dominican pastor survived all three epidemics—and kept a diary of the event as it unfolded, accompanied throughout by an intrepid African-American maintenance man. The story of Catholic religious, and Dominicans in particular, in the yellow fever years has been largely untold or, still worse, ignored. Recognition of their work and sacrifices offers a more complete understanding of the “American plague.”
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