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‘You Feel Like You’re Back in the Mission Field’

Three nursing graduates reconnect when fighting COVID-19 in New York.

Ashley Noonan Fox, Southern Tidings
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‘You Feel Like You’re Back in the Mission Field’
After first meeting on a Southern Adventist University (SAU) mission trip, Katarina Day (left) and Jocelin Esparra reconnected as nurses fighting the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City. [Photo: Southern Tidings]

After countless phone calls and much prayer, Yaniz (Seely) Rodriguez arranged to serve as a nurse on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City in the spring of 2020. 

A graduate of Southern Adventist University (SAU), Rodriguez decided to leave her home’s comforts in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States, and take on the challenge. Yet, like many other nurses, she was not prepared for what she would witness.

Despite the efforts of medical professionals, patients of all ages succumbed to COVID-19 right before her eyes. Additionally, Rodriguez watched as her co-workers contracted the same disease they were in New York to fight.

“Some days, it felt like we were working in hospice, not a hospital,” Rodriguez said. “I was scared to go to New York, but I felt very strongly that I was needed, and I still feel that way.”

Even before her 21-day contract ended, she agreed to extend her time working in New York, and she wasn’t alone in doing so. Amid the regular heartaches and 15-hour days, Rodriguez found herself surrounded by fellow SAU nursing alumni from across the country. Like Rodriguez, they had left their daily routines at home to answer the call for help.

At the New York hospital, Rodriguez reconnected with Jocelin (Morales) Esparra. The two first met as students on campus and completed SAU’s Soul-winning and Leadership Training (SALT) program together. After graduating, Esparra spent the next year as a missionary in India. When the pandemic began, Esparra had only been working as a nurse for 10 months. Although concerned that she did not have sufficient experience to help in this crisis, Esparra felt God calling her to serve.

Esparra was the only Spanish-speaking bilingual nurse in her unit, and many of her patients spoke very little English. She often served as both a nurse and a translator. Like Rodriguez, Esparra was not prepared for the heartbreak she encountered.

One of Esparra’s patients, who only spoke Spanish, was sobbing inconsolably despite the nurses’ best efforts to comfort him. He desperately wanted to communicate with his family, whom he had not seen or spoken to in days. Due to hospital policy, family members were not allowed in the building, and the patient’s room in a temporary overflow location for COVID-19 patients did not have a telephone. Esparra used her cell phone to call the patient’s family, and as peace and joy spread across the man’s face, she felt God’s presence in the room. 

While attending SAU, Esparra had participated in a medical mission trip to Brazil in 2017. Serving in the Amazon, she worked alongside SAU attendee Katarina (Monteagudo) Day. Three years later, they were now certified nurses and unexpectedly reconnected in New York City, serving together again — albeit in a very different environment.

“Working here, you feel like you’re back in the mission field,” Day explained. “There’s a lack of supplies, the equipment is older, and you have to improvise.”

Before the beginning of each new shift, her unit gathered together to pray for their patients’ safety and their own. Despite the setbacks, Day said her time in New York strengthened her relationship with God, and she feels as though she truly made a difference.

When Rodriguez, Esparra, and Day headed to New York, these SAU alumni had no idea they would reconnect in a city far from where they first met. The friendships they formed as students on campus provided a much-needed support system years later, bringing them closer to each other and to God during a dark time.

The original version of this story was posted by Southern Tidings.

Ashley Noonan Fox, Southern Tidings

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