After a year of isolation, Americans are reuniting. They are hugging, laughing and crying. They are mourning, and they are still anxious.

But they have done it together.

Here’s a look at reunions that have taken place across the country. washingtonpost.com/nation/interac…
Valerie Brachulis was the surprise guest in the back seat of the car when Emma Rice, her 5-year-old granddaughter, was finished with school on April 8.

“Oh my gosh! You really came with us!” Rice exclaimed.
On Easter Sunday, Rev. Keith Thomas held his first in-person service in over a year at Mount Olive, one of the oldest and largest Black churches in Champaign, Ill.

“The pandemic really took a toll,” said Marion Harrington, a church deacon. “But now we’re back home again.”
These four women, all in their 60s, used to play mah-jongg once a week. During the pandemic, they played online nearly every day.

Despite the physical distance, they found they were growing closer. It was “two hours of feeling like life was sort of normal,” Terri Sachs said.
After a lonely Ramadan last year, Mo Baydoun and his vaccinated relatives were finally together in April for iftar. But there's one missing seat at the table.

“Who are we without our family? That’s our roots. Ramadan really reminds us how important it is to be around family.”⁠
Matthew Viator taught piano over FaceTime during the pandemic, but it didn't sound as good. He cried during his first in-person class with Maya Asakura since March 2020.

“It’s been a real loss to me not to hear that tone that she has. That beautiful tone."
Last summer, Bec Roldan came out to relatives as nonbinary, a "stressful thing to say over the phone." In May, they were finally able to visit home and introduce their partner to their family.

“Hugging them was just surreal," Roldan said. "It was just a joyous, joyous moment.”
As spring unfolded and covid vaccines became available, reunions are popping up across the country, creating new possibilities for closeness and joy. washingtonpost.com/nation/interac…

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More from @washingtonpost

23 May
This is the place where two worlds collide: the desperation of Central American migrants and the politics of the United States.

Migration has surged to its highest level in years, driven by violence, poverty — and hopes for a new U.S. president. wapo.st/3fsQkuQ
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19 May
Public transportation ridership slid to historic lows at the start of the pandemic.

With lower ridership levels predicted until 2024, one proposal aims to serve the low-income passengers relying most heavily on public transit: Make it free.

wapo.st/3tVnVCM
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Left no other option but in-person work are service employees who disproportionately are people of color, according to data reviewed by The Washington Post.
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17 May
Trial of suburban Minneapolis police officer who fatally shot Black motorist Daunte Wright, may proceed, judge rules washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/05…
Kimberly A. Potter, a former Minnesota police officer, has not appeared in court since April 15, the day after she was charged with second-degree manslaughter for shooting Wright during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minn., the previous week. washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/05…
The omnibus, or pre-trial hearing, marks the latest development in a case that drew significant national attention just as the trial of ex-Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin played out 10 miles away. washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/05…
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15 May
Food is how people show love in the Asian American Pacific Islander community: “It’s how we communicate, how we cope and find comfort,” writes @marianliu.

For AAPI Heritage Month, we asked Asian chefs and celebrities what role food plays in their lives. washingtonpost.com/food/interacti…
When Christine Ha's mother died, leaving no recipes behind, she set out to recreate her cooking from memory. Her comfort food is fried rice, a dish her mom made.

“Being able to create food with my own two hands and make other people happy ... That really sparked a joy in me.”
Sheldon Simeon's comfort food is loco moco, “the most American” dish that's still “distinguishably Hawaii.”

“I think Hawaii can be a great snapshot for what this country needs of us, respecting each other’s culture and celebrating each other.”
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14 May
More than 584,000 people have died from coronavirus in the United States. The Post spoke to Americans who lost loved ones and had to have their last conversations through digital devices.

Here are some of the stories: wapo.st/3eMK55Z
Kristin Urquiza lost her father, Mark Anthony Urquiza.

While he was in the hospital, she would play his favorite Santana songs via FaceTime to lift his spirits. wapo.st/3eMK55Z
Chioma Oruh lost her father, Chidinma Felix Oruh.

“He died all alone in a strange environment with people he didn’t know.” wapo.st/3eMK55Z
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13 May
Sujata Hingorani and Supriya Das’s parents were partially vaccinated but died of covid-19 nine days apart.

The two sisters desperately tried to save their parents’ lives. But in India, many hospitals are full; crematoriums and graveyards are backlogged. wapo.st/3uKFE0Z
On April 16, Sujata found her father, Malay Kumar Chatterjee, a hospital bed after visiting seven different locations across New Delhi.

On April 18, another patient picked up the phone to tell her he had died hours earlier, “and no doctors were there to check.” A map showing Sujata's multiple stops to find her father a h"It took them hours to prepare admission paperwork,&quo
On April 19, Sujata cremated her father, without any other family there, during a cursory service at dark.

She barely had time to mourn. Her mother’s oxygen levels were dropping.
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