Opinion: The white scarf on the door: a life-saving lesson from the 1918 Spanish flu
As you do social distancing or self-quarantine, tie a white scarf to your door. It doesn’t mean you are giving up. Just the opposite: it means you are fully in…
by Kara N. Goldman
Mar 23, 2020
3 minutes
In 1918, a white scarf tied to the door of my grandmother’s family’s apartment on the North Side of Chicago alerted the community to a virus residing within. My grandmother, then age 3, was one of 500 million people worldwide — one-third of the planet’s population — who was infected with what came to be known as the Spanish influenza. It killed an estimated 50 million people.
She was quarantined in her room, unable to communicate with the outside world. Her parents and older
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