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Images courtesy of LaGuardia Community College
From The Asian Reporter, V31, #6 (June 7, 2021), page
11.
Professor overcomes loss to craft COVID-19
student brochures
By Luis Andres Henao
The Associated Press
When the coronavirus pandemic struck New York City, LaGuardia
Community College professor Lucia Fuentes assigned students in
her honors biology class to compile all the information they
could find about COVID-19.
The result? An online multilingual brochure based on research
from peer-reviewed journals, the World Health Organization, and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that has
become a valuable resource for immigrants in the United States
and their families abroad.
"Science is complicated and we have to make it more
accessible," Fuentes said. "This is why ... I thought it would
be a good thing for the students, and that it would be a
contribution."
Nothing stopped the project — not even the death of Fuentes’
husband on March 25, 2020 due to complications from COVID-19, or
her own bout with the disease. In her grief, she remains
committed to her students and determined to prevent others from
getting sick.
"I wasn’t going to drop my students, and I knew they were
going through tons of really horrible stuff," she said. "I
talked to some of them afterwards ... and they really
appreciated that."
She also valued their support.
"Students gave me strength," she said. "Knowing that they
expected me to be there, that’s what propels me. It always has.
I love my students."
The class brochures were also printed and distributed in her
native Guatemala as well as in Colombia. Her most recent work
involves information about COVID vaccines.
Students have already helped translate the latest brochures
into their native languages, including Albanian, Korean, and
Portuguese.
Fuentes’ project is rooted in her own life experiences. She
fled Guatemala after her father — Alberto Fuentes Mohr, a
respected political leader, economist, and diplomat — was
kidnapped in 1970 and killed in 1979. When she went into exile
to Switzerland, she didn’t know French, and she felt like she
fell behind in class because of the language barrier.
"It was an eye-opener in every way in terms of how I realize
the struggle and the questioning of the ‘fairness’ of those of
us who get the possibility of having an education," she said.
When she became a college professor, she saw how her students
faced a similar struggle.
"I realized that it was the language. They were smart, they
knew the stuff, it was just the language."
Ruben Felipe Perez, a LaGuardia student from Colombia who
hopes to attend medical school, called Fuentes an "amazing human
being" who inspires many by overcoming great challenges in her
quest to keep others safe.
"She just turned all that grief into giving to the rest of
the community," he said.
"One Good Thing" is a series that highlights individuals
whose actions provide glimmers of joy in hard times — stories of
people who find a way to make a difference, no matter how small.
Associated Press religion coverage receives support from the
Lilly Endowment through The Conversation U.S. The AP is solely
responsible for this content. |