2020 Multi-Faith Calendar Collage

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Identifier PAHU_virtual_memento_017
Title 2020 Multi-Faith Calendar Collage
Creator Chaplain Saundra Shanti
Subject COVID-19 (Disease); COVID-19 (Disease)--Prevention; COVID-19 Pandemic; COVID-19 Vaccine; Art; Art--Sculpture; University of Utah Health; University Hospital; University of Utah
Description I pulled the push-pin out of the plaster wall in my office and took down my 2020 multi-faith calendar. As part reflection, part act of aggression, I cut it apart. How could I collage these images, shapes and numbers to represent my own experience? I work on the Covid ICU at the University of Utah hospital. Usually I only enter rooms of Covid-positive patients when they are at end of life, need a religious ritual, or when they are especially melancholy and the staff feel they need in-person attention. Sometimes I facilitate virtual family connections on my hospital-issued Ipad. Most of my patients are on ventilators and too sick to speak to me anyway. Much of my spiritual care in 2020 shifted to tele-chaplaincy, which means I call the families who are prohibited from visiting their loved ones. I listen to their stories and receive their fears, concerns, and tears over the phone. I tell them that I look in on their beloved relatives. I say things like, "He is sitting in a chair and waving to me." "I see she is prone today, resting her lungs." "Yes, I will stand at the window and pray." Of course, the mothers and spouses and brothers are praying too, in their own expression of what it means to ask, hope, and wait. The figures I cut and pasted into my piece all seem to me to be praying. Two women hold onto babies. Everyone who dies of Covid has a mother who was pressed to let go. A man under the tree extends his hands upward, perhaps open to receive healing. I collaged myself, donned in PPE, among the praying people. A blue plastic gown, gloves, and a battery-operated air pack become my priestly garments. (They suit me much better than a black and white clerical collar!) I prefer a stole of flowers or greening leaves to symbolize our common human emergence from dust and stars, as well as the life-giving work of Spirit. Lastly, I added numbers to connote the passage of time. Covid patients often stay for weeks in the ICU. I cut a flower or leaf to hold each number, marking each day of life as precious. Many, but not all, religious practices are named in the art. The differences give way to unity. Just as Covid is no respecter of persons and afflicts us all, we are all part of the human collage that must care for one another.
Relation is Part of Project Art Heals Utah
Publisher Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah
Date Digital 2022
Date 2022-03-15
Type Image
Format image/jpeg
Rights Management Copyright © 2022, University of Utah, All Rights Reserved
Language eng
ARK ark:/87278/s6wwebrk
Access Rights Permission to publish has been granted to the University of Utah or through any of its departments or operating units by the rights holder of this work. Unless otherwise specified, the rights holder retains copyright of this work.
Note The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the author, and do not reflect any views, opinions, or official policy of the University of Utah or the Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library.
Keyword Brother; Daughter; Family; Father; Grandfather; Grandmother; Husband; Mother; Patient Experience; Self; Sister; Son; Virtual Memento; Wife; Art; Family; Flowers; Gratitude; Grief; Hope; Mask; Prayer
Setname ehsl_pahu
ID 1747960
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6wwebrk
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