Vigil Held in Washington DC in Memoriam of Covid-19 Victims, Nearly Half a Million Americans Killed by Virus

Joe Biden memorialized the more than 400,000 Americans who have died from Covid-19 during a vigil in Washington DC late Tuesday afternoon, as many Americans took to social media in collective mourning.

The grim milestone was passed earlier on Tuesday as the latest figures from Johns Hopkins university show that about 401,128 people have now been killed by the virus in the US amid more than 24m cases - both numbers being by far the highest in the world.

"To heal, we must remember," Biden said at the memorial. "It's hard sometimes to remember, but that's how we heal. It's important to do that as a nation."

The memorial was hosted by Biden's inaugural committee, which described the event as "a chance to reflect and honor those no longer with us. The committee had called for a "national moment of unity", asking Americans to light candles in their windows. Organizers also asked for participants to ring bells for a "national moment of remembrance".

Organizers also illumined 400 lights along the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, to remember those who died.

Many posted messages of remembrance and photos of candles to social media.

The memorial marks the first large-scale acknowledgment of Covid-19's massive toll on individuals, families and communities across the US. President-elect Biden's recognition of the tragedy stands in stark contrast to Donald Trump, who repeatedly downplayed the dangers of coronavirus amid a botched response by his administration that frequently included peddling conspiracy theories and denialism.

"We gather tonight, a nation in mourning, to pay tribute to lives we have lost, a grandmother or grandfather who is our whole world, a parent, partner, sibling or friend who we still cannot accept is no...

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