As night fell on an empty downtown Minneapolis office building, Sammi Martín stepped into a conference room, opened her laptop and logged onto a video chat service.
On the other end was Merry Trapp, who lives at Edenbrook, a nursing home in Wisconsin. All visitors there are barred because of the pandemic. Elderly residents who are most at risk are now the most alone.
"It leaves a hole in your heart," Trapp said.
"That's hard," Martín said, nodding her head. "I'm really glad we can talk."
The 18-year-old Martín and the 81-year-old Trapp had never met.
But the COVID-19 public health crisis has many Minnesotans rushing to do things they never expected to.
As the dangerous virus spreads, so too does a sudden, improvised and extraordinary outpouring of charity across Minnesota — a rising wave of kindness to neighbors or complete strangers, thousands feeling galvanized to help those in need in what has become the worst of times.
University of Minnesota medical students have signed up by the hundreds to babysit the children of front-line health care workers.