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Cover Stories

Michael Shapiro’s VOICES Premieres, a Requiem Honoring Victims of the Holocaust

November 9, 2022 by Stacey Pfeffer

More than 20 years ago, longtime Chappaqua resident Michael Shapiro found himself thumbing through a poetry compilation about the Holocaust written from the perspective of Jews in countries such as Greece, Italy and France at at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington DC. The compilation, And The World Stood Silent: Sephardic Poetry of the Holocaust, chronicles the life of nearly 160,000 Sephardic Jews exiled from Spain in 1492 and who ultimately perished in the Holocaust.

At the time, Shapiro’s work focused primarily on curating concerts featuring music of Jews who had fled the Holocaust and emigrated to Hollywood such as Erich Wolfgang Korngold who scored several films most notably The Adventures of Robin Hood. Shapiro also organized concerts featuring music from composers who had lived in Teresienstadt, a ghetto in Czechoslovakia–a hotbed of musical creativity with composers such as Gideon Klein, Pavel Haas, Hans Krása and Viktor Ullmann residing there.

Shapiro lost about 75 members of his own family among the six million Eastern European Jews massacred during the Holocaust. He yearned for the chance to immerse himself in how the Holocaust impacted Jews in the countries included in the poetry compilation and to share his own family history. Shapiro was immediately moved by the literature. “The poetry hit me completely. It was so powerful,” recalls Shapiro. A few years ago, conductor Deborah Simpkin King of Ember Choral Arts, inspired him to write the 60-minute plus work and is conducting Shapiro’s piece, which took him just seven months to write. “It flew out of me,” explains Shapiro. Shapiro was intentional in having the piece be a requiem. “Nothing gets to people like the sound of a chorus with an orchestra,” he noted.

Shapiro has written more than 100 works for orchestral, theatrical, film, chamber, choral and vocal forces throughout his career. His works have been performed by many of the greatest orchestras and performers in North America and Europe and for years he served as the conductor of the Chappaqua Orchestra. His music has been played on BBC, National Public Radio, SiriusXM and is available on major platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music.

Shapiro has always been interested in exploring themes such as prejudice and racial divisiveness in his music. In fact, one of Shapiro’s most well-known pieces is the score from Frankenstein which has been performed more than 50 times internationally. “I think I was attracted to Frankenstein because I was interested in the way the monster was depicted and treated as the other.”

Shapiro hopes his “Voices of the Holocaust” concerts “give a voice to people who no longer have a voice.” While the Nazis murdered six million Jews, they also targeted other groups such as Roma (gypsies), homosexuals and people with disabilities. This same hatred is happening today, Shapiro is quick to point out. He felt he had to write the piece now, especially with the number of Holocaust survivors dwindling each year to 300,000-350,000 survivors in 2022 according to the nonprofit Holocaust group, Claims Conference.

The premiere of the piece took place at Temple Shaaray Tefila on November 9th and at Manhattan’s famed Central Synagogue on November 10th. The timing was purposely chosen to coincide with the 84th anniversary of Kristallnacht, ‘The Night of Broken Glass’, when Jewish-owned businesses, synagogues and homes were destroyed by the Nazis in Germany and in Nazi occupied territories in Austria and Czechoslovakia. In the two-day spree of massive violence against the Jews, 30,000 Jewish males were arrested and sent to prisons or concentration camps.

The premiere at Central Synagogue also included a Q & A session with Paul Shaffer, the former musical director and band leader of Late Night with David Letterman. It also featured tenor soloist Daniel Mutlu, the Senior Cantor of Central Synagogue and the American Modern Ensemble. “Mutlu has a phenomenal voice. He really is one of the greatest cantors in the country,” exclaims Shapiro.

On the Horizon

The concert will also debut at the Reagan Library in California performed by the Los Angeles Master Chorale and conducted by Grant Gershon. The LA performance will coincide with the Auschwitz exhibition at the library for ten months starting this spring. The moving exhibition originally was showcased at the Museum of Jewish Heritage–A Living Memorial to the Holocaust in downtown New York City. Visit MichaelShapiro.com.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Auschwitz, concerts, holocaust, Kristallnacht, Michael Shapiro, Voices of the Holocaust

Armonk Teen Develops Spanish Language App

November 9, 2022 by Ella Ilan

… to Facilitate Wider Access to Healthcare for Spanish-Speaking Immigrants

Jennifer DiCapua, a 17-year-old high school senior at Sacred Heart Greenwich from Armonk, NY, saw a problem and sought an innovative solution when she was merely 14 years old. Jennifer designed and developed a mobile app, Salud por Todos, which translates to Health for All.

The app, which targets the Spanish speaking immigrant community, can be accessed anonymously by users to search for doctors using an array of customized filters, including payment options, language spoken, and whether patients require government ID. This easy-to-use app makes it possible for a Spanish-speaking immigrant without health insurance, for example, to quickly identify a doctor from the safety of their phone who speaks Spanish and has a sliding scale payment plan available. Jennifer started this project as a high school freshman as part of her school’s science research program.

To compile the database on Salud por Todos of over 6,000 providers across the Bronx, Westchester and Fairfield counties, Jennifer used a variety of publicly available online sources. She further contacted community programs for marginalized populations to direct her to providers, and reviewed providers’ websites to verify their information.

Inspired by Family and a Passion for Community Service

Jenny with her grandmother

Jennifer was inspired by her father, who immigrated to the U.S. as a child from South America and grew up facing healthcare challenges but eventually broke through barriers to find success and become a doctor himself. Her father’s interest in medicine was partly fueled by his experience being quarantined by the Department of Health for six weeks as a child with whooping cough. Jennifer’s passion for this subject was further guided by her childhood experiences visiting her grandmother weekly and befriending other children in her grandmother’s building in a predominantly Spanish speaking immigrant community in New Rochelle.

“Visiting my grandmother, I would interface with members of the Latinx community and observed the struggles they were facing while accessing healthcare. The barriers they faced included language, fear of deportation, lack of insurance, and government ID requirements,” explains Jennifer. “I compared that to my own life where my parents were able to easily book and pay for my healthcare appointments. That disparity really spoke to me.”

Believing healthcare is a human right but observing some of her childhood friends struggle to access proper healthcare while dealing with teen pregnancy and mental health issues, Jennifer wanted to do something about it.

“Seeing how my life has gone one way and their lives have gone another way has deeply impacted me,” says Jennifer. “I am so grateful for those friends that I grew up with because I remember so fondly the innocence of childhood, playing games and having dinner together, watching tv and having sleepovers. There were underlying things beneath the surface that, as a child, I didn’t understand. Now, I realize they taught me something that I didn’t know I was learning at the time. I now understand the different ways that life can take you.”

Jennifer’s father, Dr. John DiCapua says, “It’s very humbling to have your daughter reach back into your family history and bring that into what they want to do in the future. I lived that life, and we figured out a way to prosper the American dream but so many of the people I call my friends and family struggled and the fact that she’s latched onto that community to help them and figure out ways to provide value, it’s more than proud – it reaches to my history, so yes, I’m very proud of her.”

“Jennifer has persevered through challenges along the way with energy and positivity and a commitment to serving others. It’s that aspect of her personality that I’m most proud of,” says her mom, Christine DiCapua.

On Accessing Healthcare

Jenny with her dad and her grandmother (who passed away) both of whom inspired her to come up with the idea for Salud por Todos

Jennifer’s research led her to one of Westchester’s treasured resources, Open Door Family Medical Centers, which has been providing healthcare in Westchester for over fifty years. Open Door is one of over 60 federally qualified community health centers that receive government funds to provide care to anyone in the community regardless of their ability to pay. They treat over 60,000 patients at six different care sites in Westchester and Putnam Counties, and one dedicated dental site in Ulster County.

Dr. Daren Wu, Chief Medical Officer of Open Door, explains that he and his fellow clinicians manage many chronic conditions for patients who often do not want to go to a specialist because of whatever challenges they have in their lives, whether transportation, finances, or language. “Here, at Open Door, we take care of all the cardiac issues, diabetes, etc. so we get to help out a patient population that is well-deserving and we get to practice a lot of medicine.”

If patients ultimately do require specialists, Open Door has advocates that work with patients in their language to help navigate our very complex medical system.

“When patients delay their care because of a perceived access issue, this delay directly translates into higher complexity costs, morbidity and mortality,” says Dr. Wu. “If we can use Jennifer’s good work to get patients into the care they need earlier rather than later, that actually is transformative.”

Jennifer’s future goals are to continue verifying provider information for the app and eventually expanding the database so she could help different populations. She is currently applying to college and is interested in universities where she can focus on this type of research, community outreach and continuing to develop innovations to help minority populations.

Despite being very busy working on her app, Jennifer still finds time to be a normal teenager. She particularly loves to cook and try out traditional family recipes, like her grandmother’s empanadas.

For more information on Salud por Todos, go to saludportodos.org. For information on Open Door, go to opendoormedical.org.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Health for All, healthcare, Jennifer DiCapua, language translation, Salud por Todos, Spanish Language App

Meet Scarborough’s Thomas Comiskey, Author: The East Village Mafia

November 9, 2022 by Christine Pasqueralle

Lucky Luciano, Joseph Bonanno, Carlo Gambino and of course, John Gotti. These are some of the most well-known and notorious names in organized crime. And they all have one thing in common–they lived in or conducted much of their “business” in New York City’s East Village.

I lived in the East Village during my college years and knew some stories about the famed New York families of the Mafia–but clearly not everything. Now author and Scarborough resident Thomas F. Comiskey has written a book, The East Village Mafia, taking readers on a journey through time and place with an in-depth look into the lives and activities of some of the most powerful and infamous players in 20th century organized crime.

Comiskey comes from a long line of New Yorkers with his mom and grandmother having grown up in the tenements of San Juan Hill, near where Lincoln Center now sits. His dad hailed from Saratoga Springs and after World War II, married and settled in Stuyvesant Town (14th Street and Avenue A). Comiskey grew up in the East Village and lived there until 1991. Living on the northern border of the East Village gave him an insider’s view into the goings on of this secretive enclave.

“The father of one of my 1960s grammar school classmates was an ‘associate’ of a ‘made man’ in the Genovese crime family who lived on Avenue A and 12th Street. Stories about my classmate’s father’s violent exploits fascinated me,” says Comiskey. So much so that the chapter of his book entitled The Vatican Connection, is about the Genovese crime family, although Comiskey chose not to name names of his classmate’s father.

Comiskey, an attorney, spent his entire 33-year law enforcement career with the New York City Department of Investigation, exposing criminal conduct in NYC’s anti-poverty programs and public school system. First and foremost, the inspiration for his book came from his childhood and subsequent train commute. “Much of my leisure reading on my daily train commute from Scarborough to the city were the books about the Mafia. I discovered more and more about the Mafia in the East Village and its important role in the growth and direction of organized crime. After I retired, I began to research criminal records, law enforcement reports, periodicals, census records, reverse phone directories, and other sources.” He used his investigative attorney skills to help research and write his book, revealing many stories about the mostly unknown, secretive world of NY’s underground crime scene.

“The existence of this 70-year Mafia stronghold of racketeering, treachery and intrigue in the East Village was virtually unknown. Mafia royalty Lucky Luciano, Joe “the Boss” Masseria, and Joseph Bonanno lived in or frequented the East Village. They, and their East Village underbosses and capos, had a massive influence on the direction and destiny of organized crime in New York City.” The East Village Mafia brings its readers inside the social clubs, bars, restaurants and coffee houses where this underground “business” was mostly conducted–if by business we mean murders, international drug trafficking, counterfeiting, gambling and extortion.

As for Scarborough, Briarcliff Manor and the surrounding areas, Comiskey loves everything the area has to offer. He and his wife moved to Kemeys Cove in 1991 during the height of crime in the city. “I loved the city and still do, but now it has become a ‘place to visit’.” He loves to surround himself in nature and takes advantage of the natural beauty of the area. “I’m a hiker, bird watcher, history and jazz lover, so Scarborough and its surroundings has so much to offer. I love to hike the Rockefeller Park Preserve, the Croton Aqueduct, and Teatown Lake Reservation. I can see everything from hummingbirds to bald eagles sitting on my deck looking out on the Mighty Hudson.”

Comiskey is also very involved in local organizations that help preserve the history of the area such as Historic Hudson Valley, Ossining Historical Society and the Briarcliff Manor-Scarborough Historical Society. And for a night out? “When I lived in the city, I loved independent films. The Jacob Burns Film Center has no peer.”

The East Village Mafia is published by Archway Publishing and can be purchased at major booksellers.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: East Village, mafia, The East Village Mafia, Thomas Comiskey

What’s Not to Like or Even Love About Friends of Music Concerts?

November 9, 2022 by Betsy Shaw Weiner

Academy of St. Martin in the Fields Wind Ensemble (L-R): Julie Price, bassoon; Tom Blomfield, oboe; Stephen Stirling, horn; James Burke, clarinet

Sixty-eight years, ago a group of friends in Croton-on-Hudson, who had been gathering once a month to listen to records of classical music and discuss the performances, asked themselves, “Why not bring some of these musicians up to Westchester for live performances?” They did so, bringing the then-young Juilliard String Quartet up to Croton for two performances, one for young people and a second in the evening for adults, setting up a performance space in the high school. Both were over-subscribed.

Thus, Friends of Music Concerts was born, an all-volunteer, non-profit organization with a three-fold mission: to bring musicians of world renown and those relatively new in the burgeoning musical scene to Westchester; include children and older students in special ways to build audiences of the future; and make all those musical experiences as affordable as possible.

Our 69th season began in September 2022 with the wonderful Emerson String Quartet. It continued in October with recitals by the excellent pianist Jeremy Denk and then the dynamic young Jamaican-American violist Jordan Bak with his piano collaborator Ji Yung Lee. November saw the return to our stage of the phenomenal Dover Quartet.

Albert Cano Smit, Pianist

Save the Dates

Three exciting concerts are on tap for the spring of 2023. First up, on the evening of Saturday, March 18, is Curtis on Tour, a group comprised of students, faculty, and alumni from Philadelphia’s renowned Curtis Institute of Music. Their adventurous program will include Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du Soldat, narrated by actor John De Lancie. Their instruments will include violin, double bass, clarinet, bassoon, trumpet, trombone, piano, and percussion.

The afternoon of Sunday, April 16, will bring to our stage the young Spanish/Dutch pianist Albert Cano Smit. As a winner of the Young Concert Artists International Auditions held in New York City, he received our annual Performance Award. His program will include works by Mozart, Messiaen, Albéniz, and Ginastera.

Our season will conclude on the evening of Saturday, April 22, with the Academy of St Martin in the Fields Wind Ensemble, joining us from across the pond. The group’s instruments include oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and horn; with them will be a pianist as guest artist. Their program includes works by Reinecki, Mozart, and Beethoven.

All these musical delights certainly are affordable. Single tickets to our concerts are just $35; $15 for college students with IDs. Because all students 18 and under are admitted free of charge, it’s easy for them to come along with their parents, or on their own, to sample the wonder-full world of classical music.

Presenting concerts is not the only thing Friends of Music Concerts does, however. Another of our popular initiatives is our grant-funded Partnership in Education Program, through which we bring into selected school districts, at no cost to themselves, young professional musicians for one-day residencies when they perform and give master classes to the district’s music students.

Last season, as part of this program, the Tesla Quartet was in residence at White Plains High School, the Aizuri Quartet was at Henry Hudson High School in Montrose, and the Balourdet Quartet was at Sleepy Hollow High School. Additionally, the PUBLQuartet, which in the past has performed as part of our concert series, was in residence at SUNY/Purchase. In all cases, teachers were excited by the way these young professionals elicited their students’ rapt attention. The professionals often noticed that the students’ playing talent improved following the master classes. We now are accepting applications for a new round of such residencies, hoping to expand the program by increasing the grants that make them possible.

For more information about our concerts (including venue locations) and our other programs please visit our website:
friendsofmusicconcerts.org

Try it. You’ll like it!

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: Albert Cano Smit, concerts, Emerson String Quartet, Friends of Music, James Burke, Julie Price, music, Stephen Stirling, Tom Blomfield

Finding Their Voice: Hope’s Door Survivor Advocacy Group

November 9, 2022 by Jean Sheff

At a Hope’s Door Gala Fundraiser

Holidays can be stressful for everyone, especially for those in domestic violence circumstances. Experts contend that the pressure of the celebrations can inflame emotions and behavior. Other stressors can also contribute to domestic abuse. The National Commission on COVID-19 and Criminal Justice reported an 8.1% increase in U.S. domestic violence incidents following the pandemic stay-at-home orders in 2020.

Maya Lloyd, MPH, director of Outreach and Development for Hope’s Door, has witnessed this phenomenon. To help, she has formed the Hope’s Door Survivor Advocacy Group. “The purpose of the group is to include former and active Hope’s Door clients in policy advocacy and give them the opportunity to use their voices and talents to support other survivors, educate the public, and amplify their stories,” says Maya.

Survivor Advocacy Group members volunteer to take part in speaking engagements, media interviews, agency outreach, fundraising events, and to provide support to others as they navigate the court system. “It’s empowering for members to speak their truth and help others,” says Maya, “It helps them find their voice, take their power back, and break the cycle of abuse.”

A Voice Found

Melisa Dean* learned about domestic and relationship violence in high school health class. What she learned was merely a chapter from what turned out to be a very complicated book. “We were taught that it can happen in any home,” says Melisa. “We learned some red flags, but you never think it will happen to you.”

That’s one reason Melisa joined Hope’s Door Survivor Advocacy Group. “When I was presented with the opportunity, I knew it was important to share my story,” she says. “It was very hard to open up, yet I knew if I didn’t do it now, I might not have the guts to do it in the future.”

Sharing her story has allowed her to spread the word on the seriousness of domestic violence. “I know sharing my story is 100% helpful to others,” she says. “It’s so common to be in denial. On average, it takes seven attempts for a victim to leave their abuser. If my story can help someone, that’s all for the better.”

Melissa knows because she was that person. At just 19, she found herself wooed into a relationship with a man 10 years older. She was one of the lucky ones who reached out for help and escaped with the assistance from a local police detective who sent police escorts to help her leave the home. “That was the most emotionally and physically draining day of my life,” she says.

The transition was rough. At first, Melisa says she was in denial about needing additional help. But once she reached out, she was glad she did. “Hope’s Door helped me build a new life,” she says. They helped her with the legal and court processes, and she saw a counsellor there for almost a year. She says Hope’s Door also helped her answer the big questions that she was left with in the wake of her experience–where does she stand in the world? Can a relationship ever be safe?

The End of Silence

Lilliana Estes* also knows that building a new life is a challenge. The manipulation she suffered in an abusive relationship distorted her reality. “You think you are the only one to be in this situation, you feel ashamed, and that shame keeps you silent,” she says.

She was confused but trying to find her way out when, on one of her visits to the local police precinct, an officer asked Lilliana if she wanted him to pass her name on to an organization that could help. She said yes, never expecting to hear from anyone. “I got a call from Hope’s Door the very next day and that call changed my life,” she says.

The physical violence and mental abuse she suffered had worn her down, but through counselling at Hope’s Door, Lilliana began to understood trauma bonding. She became committed to her emotional growth and the personal responsibility she had to take for her life. “In my case, I came to understand it wasn’t just about choosing the wrong partner, it was deeper than that,” she says.

For her, joining Hope’s Door Survivor’s Advocacy Group is part healing and part helping. “I had become wired to be silent, but now I have a voice, and I am going to use it to help others.” Lilliana says.

* name changed to protect anonymity

A local nonprofit, Hope’s Door runs a 24-hour bilingual hotline, 888-438-8700. The agency’s confidential and free services help with safety planning, offers counseling, legal assistance, and emergency shelter to those in need. hopesdoorny.org

7 Ways You Can Help at the Holidays … and Beyond

1) Select Hope’s Door for your #GivingTuesday charity of choice on November 29, 2022.

2) Shop for Hope’s Door through AmazonSmile Charity Lists. This is a meaningful way for you to shop and donate items directly to Hope’s Door. In addition, AmazonSmile donates 0.5% of your eligible Charity List purchases to the organization at no cost to you.

Hope’s Door Donation List on Amazon.com features items such as bedding, clothing, shoes, household items, and toiletries that can help domestic violence victims start a new life. The process is simple. Just visit smile.amazon.com, select Hope’s Door and start shopping.

3) Donate from the Hope’s Door Wish List. Gift cards to local supermarkets, drugstores and department stores are always welcome. See hopesdoorny.com for more information.

4) Attend the Gala Fundraiser events held each fall and spring or organize your own event to support Hope’s Door.

5) Volunteer to join the Friends Committee and help plan and organize Hope’s Door major fundraisers.

6) Invite the Love Shouldn’t Hurt Workshop to your school or organization. This interactive Hope’s Door workshop is designed for middle schools, high schools, colleges, and community-based sites to educate students and residents.

7) Volunteer your talent. Volunteers are needed to help with childcare, translation services, and administrative duties. If you have a skill–sewing, resume writing, self-defense training–offer to share it.

Filed Under: Cover Stories Tagged With: domestic abuse, domestic violence, fundraising, Hopes Door, Survivor Advocacy Group

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