Tag Archives: New York City

Unmasking Our Heroes (New York City Fire Museum)

The New York City Fire Museum’s mission is to Preserve, Celebrate & Educate. In light of the COVID-19 Pandemic, and the historic response of the FDNY to unprecedented requests for emergency medical services (reaching over 6,500 in one day), the Museum is collecting any and all signs of gratitude expressed by the public for the FDNY. These will constitute an exhibition, “Unmasking Our Heroes” as soon as the Museum can re-open and allow unrestricted numbers of visitors to bear witness to these expressions of thanks. In the meantime, the NYC Fire Museum is asking for the public’s cooperation to contribute to this project with either their simple statements of their experiences or by contributing artifacts for display, by visiting www.nycfiremuseum.org/thanksFDNY #wewillrememberfdny

The NYC Fire Museum is the fourth oldest Museum in Manhattan, tracing its roots back to December 1870, when artifacts were put on display in fire headquarters at 155 Mercer Street. The tradition continues today in a 1904 Beaux-art firehouse at 278 Spring Street.

Touching Hearts, Not Hands: A Call to Collect Creative Responses to Coronavirus through Poems, Songs, Stories, and Videos

In a human response to the frightening and sometimes deadly virus, City Lore is collecting and archiving creative responses to the pandemic. They have started a group poem – It Takes a Pandemic. Poet Bob Holman (United States of Poetry, Language Matters) has joined forces with City Lore to curate and organize the material with us. Send your lines to jake@citylore.org with the heading It Takes a Pandemic. By submitting lines, you agree to let us share them. Click here to read the full ongoing poem. Please send other poems, videos, images or screen shots created by you or others with the heading Touching Hearts, Not Hands to jake@citylore.org. If you send materials by others let City Lore know whom you received it from if possible, and let them know if you have permission to share.

COVID Diaries POC

The West Harlem Art Fund launches COVID Diaries POC —a poignant audio series documenting the impact of the corona virus through interview and memoir. COVID Diaries POC collaboratively captures the reactions of People of Color living at the effect of this global pandemic.

Teen students from Exalt Youth will generate discussion questions that family members, neighbors and other participants will respond to using a recording feature on their phones. Those interviews will be archived and woven into an outdoor botanical installation and soundscape performance piece designed by artists Nadia DeLane and Austin Arrington.

According to Savona Bailey McClain, Executive Director and Chief Curator for the West Harlem Art Fund, “It is vital  that Black and Brown people share their thoughts and experiences firsthand. Too often others interpret the feelings of our communities for us without ever talking to us. COVID Diaries POC offers an opportunity for our communities to heal and process in real-time.”

Posterity will include the voices of African, Latino and Caribbean Americans as historical actors and not as victims.

Exalt demonstrates the power of effective educational engagement  as a viable alternative  to criminal justice involvement for today’s young people.

To participate, email westharlemartfund12@gmail.com

Bronx Covid-19 Project

The Bronx Covid-19 Project is an initiative of the Bronx African American History Project, one of the largest and most respected community based oral history initiatives in the United States. The goal is to capture the voices of Bronx residents, in audio and video form, about how their families, communities and workplaces have been affected by the Global Pandemic which has spread through the Bronx with deadly force

Recording these voices is of especial importance because the people of the Bronx, many of whom live on the edge of poverty and work in “essential occupations,” have experienced one of the highest fatality rates from COVID-19 in the entire world. In the face of mounting personal tragedies and an overwhelmed heath care system, large numbers of Bronx residents still to go to work every day via public transportation because as nurses, hospital orderlies, home health aides, grocery and maintenance workers, and buses and subway drivers, their jobs continue even as much of the economy has shut down.. Adding to the pain, social distancing, the preferred strategy for reducing COVID-10th impact, is difficult when large numbers of Bronx residents, live in crowded households containing multi-generational families.

At a time when there is growing outrage about the disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on Black people, poor people, and immigrants, recording the voices of Bronx residents, the vast majority of whom fall into at least one of those categories, represents an act of resistance as well as an affirmation of our collective conscience.

The students, scholars, and community leaders recording these voices will do so in a manner that assures everyone’s health and safety. They will also not post any interviews until interviewees give their consent both before and after the interviews are conducted.

If we are ever to change the conditions which have imposed such disproportionate pain on Bronx residents, we must allow them to speak for themselves. The Bronx COVID-19 Project aims to do just that.

A/P/A Voices: A COVID-19 Public Memory Project

The Asian/Pacific/American Institute at New York University, in collaboration with Tomie Arai, Lena Sze, Vivian Truong, and Diane Wong, is in the early stages of developing A/P/A Voices: A COVID-19 Public Memory Project, a public memory project related to COVID-19 and A/P/A communities. For more information, read the framing statement. If you are interested in being involved, please email apa.archives@nyu.edu.  

Beyond Statistics: Living through a Pandemic

The Tenement Museum designed an online exhibit to respond to the Covid-19 crisis, titled Beyond Statistics: Living through a Pandemic. The exhibit interprets the stories of five people, all immigrants or migrants, who lived in the museum’s historic buildings and all died of contagious disease. Through their stories, we look at how historians can uncover perspectives on living with and suffering from contagious disease, the context of prejudice, medical science, and government and community response, and ultimately, the importance of historians finding and honoring stories of individuals.

Objects of Comfort

In late March, the Tenement Museum launched a crowdsourced collecting initiative, Objects of Comfort. Grown from their digital exhibit platform Your Story, Our Story, Objects of Comfort seeks to know how people are coping through this crisis. What objects, traditions, recipes, and songs are giving people strength? How are people finding inspiration from their families, and from the past, to keep going? How do meaningful objects connect us to each other, spark memories, and even make us healthier?
The object stories are curated into an online collection on Your Story, Our Story, and any new submission will be added to that collection.

Anyone can contribute a story of something that is bringing them comfort right now—all that’s needed to submit is a story of 250 words or less, and an image. Families and classes can participate through a special group gallery function on the platform.