Baltimore County unveiled its memorial to those who died in the pandemic last fall in Lake Roland Park. Credit: Dan Rodricks

During a hike through Lake Roland Park, I came across something I did not expect to find there — a memorial to those who died in the pandemic.

I missed reports of its unveiling last November, but have since learned the following: It was commissioned by the Baltimore County government as we emerged from the pandemic three years ago. Eight local judges selected California artist James Dinh’s design from 74 submissions. The memorial is meant to honor more than 3,100 county residents who died from the COVID-19 virus, a highly localized tribute, like the honor rolls of war dead you see in town squares. 

But, of course, the pandemic killed nearly 7 million people worldwide; about 1.2 million of those deaths occurred in the United States. Disease has no boundaries. 

It already seems like ages ago, but we are not so far removed from that trauma, and the memorial at Lake Roland got me thinking, in a way I did not expect, about how we’ve probably underestimated the effect of the pandemic on our American lives.

A “prayer millstone” sits at the center of Baltimore County's Covid-19 memorial.
A “prayer millstone” sits at the center of the Baltimore County Covid-19 memorial, designed by artist James Dinh. Credit: Dan Rodricks

The memorial sits at the top of a rise in the parkland, a half-circle of clean, bright stone inscribed with poetry about the pandemic. It’s a simple design, but for what official sources call a “prayer millstone” that sits at the center of the memorial. This remarkable piece, dark and grooved to suggest the ripples that result from a stone tossed into a lake, is clearly symbolic of the widespread effects of the COVID-19 virus. That it’s called a “prayer millstone” suggests a place for meditation on a traumatic period in the nation’s history: Literally, a millstone is used to grind things down. Figuratively, it could mean a heavy burden, something that is difficult to evade or escape. Either way, the symbolism is stark.

Dinh’s simple design stirs up memories of 2020-2023, when life quickly changed for all of us — away from work and school, isolated at home; unable to visit family, especially elderly relatives; restaurants and bars closed; doctors, nurses and other caregivers stressed out and burned out; masking, testing for infection, then getting the shots. 

We have moved on from all that, but not without a sense of lingering change. People in all walks of life still talk about how the pandemic hurt business, hurt careers, hurt students, hurt downtowns (and not just Baltimore’s), hurt our sense of community. The pandemic affected all of us, but not really in a communal way; we were too isolated to have the physical sense of unity against a common foe. And the pandemic compounded the social and political divisions that had become more pronounced in the Trump era.

An effective leader would have given the nation a sense of unity against a common enemy. Instead, the initial denial of a mass threat and, later, denigration of science in the MAGA world made things worse. 

“In the final year of Donald Trump’s presidency, more than 450,000 Americans died from COVID-19, and life expectancy fell by 1.13 years, the biggest decrease since World War II,” a panel of public health professionals reported in Scientific American. “Many of the deaths were avoidable; COVID-19 mortality in the U.S. was 40 percent higher than the average of the other wealthy nations in the Group of Seven.”

For this and other reasons, Americans refused to give Donald Trump a second term as president.

And yet, four years later, here we are again. This time, Trump and his administration appear determined to further denigrate science and threaten the nation’s health — not through incompetence, but through sinister intention. We now have Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an anti-vaccine crackpot, as secretary of health. We have seen large, arbitrary and seemingly punitive cuts in funds for the National Institutes of Health. Congressional Republicans appear eager to deprive millions of low-income Americans of government-subsidized health care and food benefits.

In March, a large, colorful image of Dr. Anthony Fauci was removed from an inspirational mural at NIH, a petty purge of a doctor whose actions saved countless lives during the pandemic.

So, no, we have not moved on. 

We have regressed. 

We are more vulnerable, less safe because of Trump’s inexplicable and inexcusable attacks on the nation’s health infrastructure.

The Lake Roland Nature Council and the Baltimore County Arts Guild say the Covid-19 Memorial not only honors the memory of those lost, but also provides a “meditative space for reconciliation and remembrance.” Credit: Dan Rodricks

I was glad to see the memorial to victims of the pandemic in Lake Roland Park. But it’s not like a war has ended. When a war ends, there is a period of peace. Troops come home. Honor rolls are finalized, memorials created. There’s a sense of finality, hope for the future and a degree of faith that we’ve learned something.

Does anyone feel that way now, in the wake of the pandemic, with Trump in office again? The only real hope remains, as always, in the American people. Only we can force a course correction back to a better, healing future for this traumatized nation.

Dan Rodricks was a long-time columnist for The Baltimore Sun and a former local radio and television host who has won several national and regional journalism awards over a reporting, writing and broadcast...

One reply on “Dan Rodricks: A meditation on the pandemic memorial at Lake Roland”

  1. My husband died of Covid-pneumonia. He was in the hospital for 7 days after falling.
    They sent him to a rehab bordering Loch Raven Reservoir for physical therapy. He caught Covid while he was there.
    They told me they were sending him down to the Covid floors.
    I asked them what they meant by that.
    They said they have 2 floors of Covid patients on the bottom and 2 floors of regular patients on the upper 2 floors.
    That’s 50% of the building with Covid patients.
    Why didn’t they tell us before they sent him there?
    I would have sent him to another safer Rehab place.
    He got Covid 3 times, the 4th time they said it was Covid Pneumonia.
    They called me and told me I had to get a hospital bed for him as they were releasing him as he wasn’t doing the physical therapy.
    I said he’s too sick to do that now.
    They said they reported him to Medicare as refusing treatment so Medicare wasn’t going to pay for him.
    They said I had to pay them $1680 @ night to keep him there, or get a hospital bed for him at home.
    I got the hospital bed, but he was
    very sick. He was not able to eat anything and it was difficult to get his medicine in him.
    He died 10 days later.
    I wish I could have sued them for the horrible treatment they gave him.

Comments are closed.