2025 Celebration of Remembrance
The 2025 HGR Celebration of Remembrance took place on May 12, 2025, at 1 p.m. in the Irvine Auditorium of the University of Pennsylvania. Many M1 College of Medicine student volunteers participated in the event. The celebration of remembrance is an annual event hosted by the Humanity Gifts Registry, where we honor the body donors from our anatomy lab. Students, faculty, and staff from all Philadelphia medical schools will be in attendance, as well as family members of our donors.
- Eulogist: Zoe Boston
- Reading of names: Supriya Behl (PHL), Vivian Bui (PHL), Eimile Cusenza (PHL), Paulina Daugis (PHL), Mohammed Kahn (PHL), Katherine Landry (PHL), Priscilla Mejia (PHL), Laura Brigandi (WR), Corinne Packel (WR), Dylan Persaud (WR), Sachin Pranesh (WR), Maggie Vacchiano (WR)
- Musical performance: Akshara Kannan
- DUCOM’s Doctors Note: David Shin, Katie MacNary, Gopika Pillai, Taylor Forry, Celena Fei, Rudra Amin, Akshara Kannan, Shreya Ranadive
- Greeter: Natalia Kelley (PHL) and Jane Taylor (PHL)
Eulogy
Hello friends and family. My name is Zoë Boston and I am a first year medical student. I’d like to share my unique perspective on the decision that your loved ones made in donating their bodies to medicine.
My grandfather, Bob Quillen, was a pastor for nearly 40 years. He was kind, boisterous, and endlessly giving. For the entirety of me and my siblings’ childhoods, he took on the role as our personal Uber driver by making sure that each of us got to violin lessons, cheerleading practice, and art class on time. He was an ever-dependable presence in my life. When my grandpa died in January, we did our best to honor his wishes by donating his body to medicine. My Grandpa was taken to Temple’s Medical School so that, even in death, he could still help others on their journey. I believe it is his generosity and desire to help that he shares with many of your loved ones.
Many of you are mourning your family members. You’re feeling waves of grief that come and go, experiencing little moments that remind you of them, and relearning what it means to live a life without this person. I am living through this experience right now as well. I want to emphasize that you are not alone, and that your loved ones are not alone. The gift of donating their body is one of the most selfless acts, and it is one that is not made lightly. In making this decision, they chose to enlighten and teach an entire generation of future physicians.
I had the unique opportunity to learn anatomy with donors both before and after my grandpa’s passing. After my grandpa’s passing, I had a renewed sense of what it means to donate your body to medicine. At first, I struggled reconciling the idea that my grandpa’s body was teaching medical students, and that these medical students didn’t know his quirks or humor, or his generosity and kindness. Then I realized that we as medical students do know the sheer generosity of this person by the very choice that they made to be there for us. While we might not have known your loved ones personally, we understand the importance of the choice they made.
From the bottom of my heart, thank you.
Contact Us
Sara S. Solomon, MS
Human Anatomy Labs Program Manager
Drexel University College of Medicine, University City Campus
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy
60 N. 36th St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
215.991.8858
sms858@drexel.edu
Jennifer Lees, MLT (ASCP)CM
Lead Human Anatomy Lab Technician
Drexel University College of Medicine, West Reading Campus
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy
50 Innovation Way
Wyomissing, PA 19610
267.857.6835
jl4467@drexel.edu
Theresa M. Connors
Drexel University College of Medicine, Queen Lane Campus
Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy
2900 W. Queen Lane
Philadelphia, PA 19129
215.991.8307
tc42@drexel.edu
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