First Person: Getting home from Poland, in COVID-19 lockdown
POZNAN, Poland — When my wife and I left Canada on March 3 destined for her ailing mother’s hospital bedside, we never imagined that we would face the prospect of being in Europe and watching country after country go into various forms of lockdown — or that we would be directly affected by it.
We arrived in Poland the next day, in time to go directly from the airport to see her mother alive for the last time.
Two days later, however, the family had to face the grim reality of planning for a funeral, and we had to postpone our return home.
That first extension of what we expected would be a visit of less than a week coincided with the first positive tests for COVID-19 infections in Poland. That was also the beginning of a cascade of ever-tougher actions by the Polish government designed to protect the population from the new coronavirus that had already devastated regions of China and was quickly making its way through northern Italy and elsewhere.