…the former real estate investor died of complications from the coronavirus in May.
By Kristen Hare for Tampa Bay Times
In the final hours of Deo “Mohan” Persaud’s life, as his oxygen levels dropped and his kidneys shut down and his heart rate slowed, he was not alone.

The phone by his hospital bed sat off the hook. On the line were his wife of 56 years and their three children and grandchildren. They talked to him through the night, recording part of their conservation.
Intubated and sedated, he could not respond. But he could hear them, the doctor promised, so they kept talking.
“All the years that we count is gone,” said his wife, Sylvia Persaud, sniffing through sobs. “All the years that we count together is gone, honey.”
Mr. Persaud was a native of Guyana who built a life in two different countries and two different industries. His American dream was to raise his children in a safe place where they’d learn to work hard.
He did, and they did.
He died on the morning of May 30 after getting the coronavirus in a St. Petersburg nursing home a month before. He was 80.

Mr. Persaud made his family the center of his life, but he grew up mostly on his own.
His father died soon after he was born in Strasveay, Guyana, on South America’s eastern coast. His mother remarried and, at 8 or 9, pulled him from school and sent him to work to help support their growing family.
Mr. Persaud worked for a tailor and still loved to read. As a teenager, he traveled to a bauxite mining town and found work as a stock boy at a general store. Over the years, he moved up to supervisor, then started his own shop with the help of his old boss.
After surviving an outbreak of political and race-based violence, he moved back home and started a small store in the town of Annandale, about 30 minutes from Guyana’s capital, Georgetown.












