Beatrice González helps Icelynn Marrow-Wyatt, 4, buckle the free backpack filled with school supplies she received at the first Jonathan D. Daniels, MD, Memorial School Drive.

Beatrice González helps Icelynn Marrow-Wyatt, 4, buckle the free backpack filled with school supplies she received at the first Jonathan D. Daniels, MD, Memorial School Drive.

Memorial School Drive a Profound Labor of Love

Published August 1, 2022

story by dirk hoffman

Hundreds of children in the city of Buffalo received free backpacks filled with school supplies July 31 as the result of the first Jonathan D. Daniels, MD, Memorial School Drive: The Next Generation of Transformational Leaders.

“Dr. Daniels gave me wings to fly. It’s so sad that he passed before we could fully realize what he had done for us. ”
Daniel Popoola, PhD
Fourth-year medical student
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Jonathan D. Daniels, MD.

The late Jonathan D. Daniels, MD ’98

Daniels, associate director of admissions at the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and a 1998 graduate, died July 4, along with two of his adult daughters, Jordan and Jensen, in a fire at their North Buffalo home.

Three hundred and twenty-nine backpacks were distributed to kindergartners through 12th-graders at Urban Family Practice, 1315 Jefferson Ave., the site where Daniels practiced as a pediatrician.

Idea Formulated Out of Conversations With Student

The event was spearheaded by Beatrice González, a recent alumna of the natural sciences interdisciplinary master’s program, and one of the many students mentored by Daniels.

“We shared a lot of interests in health policy and health equity, especially in the community,” González says. “We had talked about how we could provide tools to his pediatric patients or just the public in general, and especially our community in the Jefferson Avenue neighborhood.”

The pair finally settled on the idea of organizing a school supplies drive.

“The week of his passing we were supposed to meet to finalize plans,” González says. “Afterwards, I contacted the Daniels family to make sure it was on board with me moving forward with the project.”

González asked UB faculty, staff and students to consider donating new backpacks and school supplies, as well as reaching out to the community at large.

“I could not have done this without the UB community and the community of Buffalo in general, his family and loved ones,” she says. “The response has been incredible. It is bittersweet, but the support has been amazing.”

“I’m thrilled to see students like Beatrice González step up to lead events like this,” says Allison Brashear, MD, MBA, UB’s vice president for health sciences and dean of the Jacobs School. “It is the perfect way to honor Jonathan’s memory as it speaks directly to his core mission of diversity and inclusion, and helping students achieve success.”

Emmekunla K. Nylander, MD ’96, speaks to the local media about her friend and colleague, the late Jonathan D. Daniels, MD.

Emmekunla K. Nylander, MD ’96, speaks to the local media about her friend and colleague, the late Jonathan D. Daniels, MD.

Support of School, Community Heartwarming

Emmekunla K. Nylander, MD, ’96, an obstetrician-gynecologist who attended medical school with Daniels, says “he was like a brother to me.”

“It’s heartwarming and overwhelming and brings a tear to my eye to know we have the support of the community and the Jacobs School,” she says.

“Jonathan stands on our shoulders. He is our angel. A lot of the medical students who are here are part of his legacy. They will gain from this,” Nylander adds. “He served the children, so we wanted to uplift the children.”

Prior to the July 31 distribution, volunteers gathered at the Jacobs School building to fill backpacks for two consecutive Saturdays, using supply lists geared toward appropriate grade levels.

A group of first-year medical school students participated July 30 as part of the Day of Service program for incoming students.

Daniel Popoola and his two sons.

Medical student Daniel Popoola, PhD, and his two sons, King David, 5, left, and Hallelujah, 4, volunteered at the community-based event.

Continuing the Mission of Diversity, Inclusion

González sees the memorial school drive as an extension of Daniels’ work to promote diversity in medicine.

“The goal is to make sure that children have the tools they need to be successful in school,” she says. “We wanted to make sure we could provide that for each and every student this year and in future years.”

“I want to continue this every year, whether I am in Buffalo or on the moon. I need to make sure I honor Dr. Daniels and continue his work because it was important,” González says.

Daniel Popoola, PhD, a fourth-year medical student, remembers how difficult it was to leave his 1-year-old son on that first day of medical school and how Daniels learned of his struggle that day and sought him out to speak to him about it.

“He told me that sometimes we have to be away from our loved ones so that we can be there for them later,” he says.

“Dr. Daniels gave me wings to fly. It’s so sad that he passed before we could fully realize what he had done for us,” Popoola adds. “The hardest thing is the inability to say ‘thank you.’ I vowed to stay in Buffalo and continue the work that he has done. He cannot be replaced.”

View of backpacks ready to be distributed.

The backpack distribution event was a tribute to the late Jonathan D. Daniels, MD, a beloved member of the Jacobs School community.

Focusing on Project Helped Grieving Process

González says the school drive is a labor of love for her because of the impact Daniels had on her and the fact he always made himself available whenever she needed advice.

“I knew I had to do this because he was always there for me. This is only a fraction of what he has done for me,” she says. “This is something that was started from conversations we had, and I will continue it for the rest of my life.”

González says the work has also helped her cope with the grieving process.

“This project has been something to really look forward to in this time of grief,” she says. “We need to continue to be strong and remember that he is with us in spirit and just carry that with us.”