Eni Ti A Je: Iye Nrin Tour - January

Awọn Y's Norman E.. Ile-iṣẹ Alexander fun Igbesi aye Juu jẹ igberaga lati ṣafihan Tani A Ṣe: Awọn iye Nrin Tour, iṣafihan awọn oṣere agbegbe ti o nsoju iye omoniyan ti o yatọ ni oṣu kọọkan.

Àfojúsùn wa ni, laarin otitọ COVID-19 kan, lati ṣe igbelaruge awọn oṣere agbegbe ati funni ni iraye si agbegbe agbegbe ti Northern Manhattan si aworan. Lakoko ti o jẹ deede a yoo fẹ ki aworan yii han lori awọn ogiri Y, pẹlu awọn idiwọn ti o ni ibatan COVID lọwọlọwọ, o jẹ ipinnu wa lati mu awọn oṣere agbegbe wa si awọn ita ti agbegbe wa.

January: Justice

‘Isabella’
Solvent Transfer on Watercolor Paper, 2017
By Linda Smith

lindacsmith.com  |  instagram.com//laughing_linda

Linda Smith is an artist and art educator, who started a non-profit organization while living in Kigali, Rwanda, called the TEOH Project, which provides cameras and art classes to children in Rwanda, Ghana, and the Bronx. She has been commissioned by the United Nations to provide photography classes to survivors and former perpetrators of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. She earned her BA from Syracuse University, MA in Communications at Goldsmith College at the University of London, and MFA from the University of Connecticut. Her work has been exhibited in the United Nations, embassies, and universities.

Akọsilẹ Olutọju Nipasẹ Gal Cohen
galcohenart.com  |  instagram.com/galshugon 

‘Isabella’ is a mixed-media work showcasing a 1911 young immigrant from Italy to the US. It’s part of the series “Sojourners,” where Smith manipulates archival photographs of family members who immigrated from Italy to the US to echo the cross generational complexities that are inherited to the process of Immigration. The haunted look on Isabella’s face and the ghostly reflection of her image speaks to the rooted conflict and collective memory of the migration and immigration movements — the vulnerability and displacement, along with the reinvention of life itself, embedded with hopes for a safer, brighter future. Questions of justice, equality, and human rights are key to processes of migration and immigration around the world, as the wide range of by-choice migrants, through refugees and asylum seekers reveal the built-in inequality in contemporary societies, especially amidst the current global refugee crisis.

Justice

Nipa Rabbi Ari Perten, Norman E. Ile -iṣẹ Alexander fun Oludari Igbesi aye Juu

Justice is at the center of the American myth. The average school day begins with a recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in which students declare the US to be one nation… “with liberty andododo for all.” Though this mantra is so regularly repeated, our lived experience often indicates thatododo is, perhaps, not always the reality which we experience, but rather a dream towards which we aspire.

The classic image ofododo (based on the Roman goddess of Justice, Iustitia) is ablindfolded woman with a set of scales in one hand and a sword in the other. This representation plays on the concept of sight asserting thatododo needs to be impartially applied without regard to wealth, power, or any other status. In theMidrash Tanhuma (Shoftim 8:1), we are reminded, “When the judge sets his heart on a bribe, he becomes blind to justice and is unable to judge [a case] honestly.” Justice must be directed without the imposition of external factors. When sight is allowed, it clouds judgement, distancingododo from its appropriate application.

Interestingly, in the book ofDeuteronomy (22:1-3) there is an explanation as to the application ofododo in the return of lost property that also utilizes the image of sight. The final verse insists, “and so too shall you do with anything that your fellow loses and you find: you may not hide yourself.” The medieval French commentator, Rashi, remarks on this final injunction, “You must not cover your eyes, pretending not to see it.” Here, playing on this same theme of sight, Rashi insists thatododo can only occur when we actively pursue sight, removing any blindfolds that might limit the ability to see.

As our country continues to struggle with the concept ofododo, we must each ask, what is my understanding ofododo?

Nipa Y
Ti iṣeto ni 1917, awon YM&YWHA ti Washington Heights & Inwood (awon Y) jẹ ile-iṣẹ agbegbe Juu akọkọ ti Northern Manhattan-ṣiṣe iranṣẹ agbegbe ati oniruru-ọrọ agbegbe ti iṣelu-imudarasi didara igbesi aye fun awọn eniyan ti gbogbo ọjọ-ori nipasẹ awọn iṣẹ awujọ to ṣe pataki ati awọn eto imotuntun ni ilera, alafia, ẹkọ, ati idajo awujo, lakoko igbega oniruuru ati ifisi, ati abojuto awọn ti o nilo.

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