Monday, December 17, 2018
Friday, December 14, 2018
Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Harlem Community Board Float, November 20, 2018
Riding
the Harlem streets with the Harlem Community Board float in celebration
of the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday + igniting the neighborhood
skyline Christmas lights with Queen Mother Dr. Delois Blakely!
Thursday, November 8, 2018
When Election Night Isn't a Victory, Lilith Magazine, November 8, 2018
"While women broke many a glass ceiling this week, not every story had
a happy ending. We were on the scene with Florida candidate Lauren Baer
who ran a tough race in Florida, as the disappointing results came in.
“My campaign started with a sense of duty to defend the rights of my very sick mother and with a dream that I could help create a better world for my very young daughter,” she said in her concession speech. “But from the very start this campaign was about more than my mother and my daughter. It’s been about a dream that we all share…that children can be born into this world safe and wanted, that they can learn in good public schools and play in clean water and live free from senseless gun violence… Although our campaign must end tonight, our movement to restore faith in democracy will live on ….”
A selection of photos follows below."
“My campaign started with a sense of duty to defend the rights of my very sick mother and with a dream that I could help create a better world for my very young daughter,” she said in her concession speech. “But from the very start this campaign was about more than my mother and my daughter. It’s been about a dream that we all share…that children can be born into this world safe and wanted, that they can learn in good public schools and play in clean water and live free from senseless gun violence… Although our campaign must end tonight, our movement to restore faith in democracy will live on ….”
A selection of photos follows below."
A Jeffersonville Rally with Congress Hopeful Liz Watson for Lilith Magazine, November 2018
"At the Jeffersonville neighborhood rally, the atmosphere was infused
with enthusiasm, not only for Liz Watson, Democratic candidate for
Indiana congresswoman, but with candidates running for local and state
offices. The rally was a home-grown Indiana Democratic event, hosted by
the party for volunteers willing to take time out of their own schedules
to hit door after door after door in North Jeffersonville.
A motivator, discussing the stakes in this election, quotes Martin Luther King: “An individual cannot start living until he/she rises above the narrow confines of individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”
“That’s why we’re here — to make sure that Liz Watson is elected to Congress because she’s gonna represent the working class. She’s going to enable us to stop Trump and the harm he has inflicted upon Americans!” shouts one speaker.
The North Jefferson neighborhood slated for Saturday’s canvassing is known for its low voter turnout. A speaker explains that the community is in need of a personal touch. The campaign needs us all to get out there to talk up Liz.
I accompany Liz and her husband Craig. He’s on his cell phone, using an app to figure out which houses to go to — this late in the game, they must be sure to knock only on Democrat’s doors. Liz carries a hard copy of the addresses, just in case.
The homes are small, laden with worn couches on sprawling front porches and leftover pumpkins decorated for Halloween, cats seated in windows, and barking dogs behind fences. One house sign, taped to a grey curtained window reads, “stay away from my house I am an axe murderer bitch”. Obviously, we didn’t knock there.
Most sleepy residents, prospective voters who happily opened not only their doors, but their hearts, to Liz’s charm, seem to believe that she is going to win. Liz is going to Washington, according to her fans. It seems as if her self-identification as an Indiana Hoosier was a real breakthrough — this Tennessee interloper certainly isn’t one of them Liz is.
Liz is there at the door, which is sufficient reason, home owners say, to vote for her. Almost everyone who answered the door hadn’t been planning to vote, that is, until Liz arrived. One woman immediately left home to go vote for her. In this year’s race, the numbers of doors knocked on is key to winning, and the more support, the better. Liz’s mom, a woman in her 70s, has knocked on over a thousand doors.
The most spirited place we visit is Mark’s Old World Barber shop on the corner, full of firemen, policemen, and janitors — union guys, all of whom were thrilled to see Liz.
Later, Liz was joined by a local congressman and steel worker, who came down to Jeffersonville all the way from Gary. His looming presence opened more doors for Liz, to whom union support is both crucial and meaningful. This big union guy in his steel sweatshirt, stomping for Liz was a sight to behold. A huge feat for a little Jewish girl.
A selection of images follow below."
A motivator, discussing the stakes in this election, quotes Martin Luther King: “An individual cannot start living until he/she rises above the narrow confines of individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”
“That’s why we’re here — to make sure that Liz Watson is elected to Congress because she’s gonna represent the working class. She’s going to enable us to stop Trump and the harm he has inflicted upon Americans!” shouts one speaker.
The North Jefferson neighborhood slated for Saturday’s canvassing is known for its low voter turnout. A speaker explains that the community is in need of a personal touch. The campaign needs us all to get out there to talk up Liz.
I accompany Liz and her husband Craig. He’s on his cell phone, using an app to figure out which houses to go to — this late in the game, they must be sure to knock only on Democrat’s doors. Liz carries a hard copy of the addresses, just in case.
The homes are small, laden with worn couches on sprawling front porches and leftover pumpkins decorated for Halloween, cats seated in windows, and barking dogs behind fences. One house sign, taped to a grey curtained window reads, “stay away from my house I am an axe murderer bitch”. Obviously, we didn’t knock there.
Most sleepy residents, prospective voters who happily opened not only their doors, but their hearts, to Liz’s charm, seem to believe that she is going to win. Liz is going to Washington, according to her fans. It seems as if her self-identification as an Indiana Hoosier was a real breakthrough — this Tennessee interloper certainly isn’t one of them Liz is.
Liz is there at the door, which is sufficient reason, home owners say, to vote for her. Almost everyone who answered the door hadn’t been planning to vote, that is, until Liz arrived. One woman immediately left home to go vote for her. In this year’s race, the numbers of doors knocked on is key to winning, and the more support, the better. Liz’s mom, a woman in her 70s, has knocked on over a thousand doors.
The most spirited place we visit is Mark’s Old World Barber shop on the corner, full of firemen, policemen, and janitors — union guys, all of whom were thrilled to see Liz.
Later, Liz was joined by a local congressman and steel worker, who came down to Jeffersonville all the way from Gary. His looming presence opened more doors for Liz, to whom union support is both crucial and meaningful. This big union guy in his steel sweatshirt, stomping for Liz was a sight to behold. A huge feat for a little Jewish girl.
A selection of images follow below."
Thursday, October 25, 2018
On the Road with Susan Wild in Pennsylvania, Lilith Magazine, October 25, 2018
"Lilith photographer Joan Roth and her granddaughter, Lilith writer
Shira Gorelick, visited the congressional campaign of Susan Wild in
Pennsylvania’s 7th district and documented what they found. Shira’s
account is accompanied by Joan’s photos below.
On Saturday, October 13, Joan Roth and I set forth on an early morning schlep to Pennsylvania. This schlep felt like a mission, fueled by mutual purpose from different vantage points. She has had the strength to be in this fight for 50 years, and knows the constant struggle. But she couldn’t have imagined that she and I, as her 24-year old granddaughter, would have to fight the same way in what feels like a dystopian political climate.
We arrived as two of many out-of-staters first in Bethlehem, then in Easton, and finally in Allentown—a city I’m familiar with from my years as a student at Muhlenberg College – for three canvass launches in support of Susan Wild.
Wild is an outspoken community leader, attorney, and 60-year-old mother of two. She is running for a seat in Pennsylvania’s newly redistricted 7th Congressional District, based around Allentown and the Lehigh Valley, which is currently Republican controlled. Endorsed by Emily’s List and NARAL, she won the Democratic primary over five male candidates and is the only woman to run in this district.
The significance of this specific race is that it could singlehandedly determine whether or not the House of Representatives is flipped blue. Earlier this year, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court found that the state’s congressional district map constituted an illegal partisan gerrymander. The court instated a remedial map for this election cycle, but not without backlash – as this seat in congress is one of the most highly contested. In 2016, Hillary Clinton beat Donald Trump in this seat by only 1.1% because of party divides between counties that make up the district.
Having grown up in a military family and lived in the 7th District for over 30 years, Wild is touting an authentic connection to and understanding of the people and communities – including the Jewish community – that she aspires to represent. Meeting her, I found her undeniably tough, but also gregarious and approachable with a warm smile, a strong presence, and a relatable sense of humor. She loves to talk about of the joy she experiences spending time at her home garden with her dog.
“The Torah teaches us to ‘love your neighbor as you love yourself.’ In Washington, we’ve seen a lot more ‘love yourself’ than ‘love your neighbor’ in recent years,” Susan Wild told us. “I’m seeking to change that. Jewish values such as Tikkun Olam inform my platform of protecting Social Security and Medicare, defending women’s reproductive choices, and working for equal opportunity for all.
Wild is a groundbreaker who has dedicated her life in the public sphere. She was confirmed by the City Council as the first woman Solicitor of the City of Allentown, and if she wins by the modest margin that she is projected to win by as of now, she will become the Lehigh Valley’s first woman representative in Congress.
At her canvassing launches, Wild confidently spoke across multiple intersecting issues: healthcare, education, job creation, minimum wage, climate change, social security, prison reform, access to safe and legal abortion and family planning, and restorative justice.
“The environment used to be a bipartisan issue, all of a sudden it’s not. All of a sudden, people in Washington don’t care about what our streams and rivers and air look like,” Wild said.
A vocal advocate for abortion rights, Wild is running against Marty Nothstein (R), also-Jewish, an anti-choicer who compares himself to Donald Trump.
When asked about why she’s running, Wild responded: “What got me into this race in the first place is my children—my daughter is 22 and my son is 25. I am so worried about their generation, the generations to follow, and the country we are leaving behind for them.
What keeps her fire fueled are the working families and the people who are struggling to pay their bills, their utilities, their healthcare, and who just feel like Washington has left them behind.
“Because you know what?” she said, “I think it has. We have to have living wages. $7.25 an hour is unconscionable. ”
Wild doesn’t take any corporate PAC money, like many insurgent candidates running in this election. Senator Bob Casey, who spoke at Wild’s canvassing events, emphasizes the importance of Wild’s pledge against corporate PAC money: “This is a corporate special interests take over of the United States government. Corporate special interests run the house, they run the senate, and they have disproportionate -if not overwhelming – influence on the executive branch. And as of a week ago today, they got their 5th vote on the third branch of government, the United States Supreme Court.”
Constituents, mostly women and girls, of all ages showed up in numbers to express their passionate support for Wild,
“I’m voting for Susan Wild because we’re in the worst political climate of my life. We are being priced out of our housing, the food is going up…everything is going up, except for my social security,” Valerie Chambers, a resident of Allentown Pennsylvania told me.
Abbi Jacobson – co-creator and star of the hit Jewish feminist Comedy Central series Broad City who grew up in Pennsylvania– came to Allentown from Brooklyn to show support for Wild. In their matching “A Wild Woman Belongs in the House” shirts, Jacobson and Wild discussed the importance of getting people under 30 years old out to vote.
As Jacobson pronounced, “She is so rad.”
“We’ve had students out canvassing for us and it’s because they understand what the future looks like if we don’t elect a new wave of candidates, who frankly haven’t been politicians before. The people who are running this year are moms, people who have left their private jobs, and people who just desperately care about the future of our country,” said Wild.
though there is a vehement push to get Americans under 30 to vote, a majority of young Americans feel hopeless or believe that they cannot affect what the government does. Or, they’re simply too busy to fully engage past an Instagram post.
But what struck me most about the attitudes of the women who came out to support Wild was not just their excitement, but the fearlessness in their anger as well. The anger at the blatant injustices of a government that is behaving more like a boy’s club. At the events, everyone could speak out without feeling pressure to “calm down” or sweep anything under the rug. I left feeling that as angry as we can stand to get, let’s get there. —Shira Gorelick"
On Saturday, October 13, Joan Roth and I set forth on an early morning schlep to Pennsylvania. This schlep felt like a mission, fueled by mutual purpose from different vantage points. She has had the strength to be in this fight for 50 years, and knows the constant struggle. But she couldn’t have imagined that she and I, as her 24-year old granddaughter, would have to fight the same way in what feels like a dystopian political climate.
We arrived as two of many out-of-staters first in Bethlehem, then in Easton, and finally in Allentown—a city I’m familiar with from my years as a student at Muhlenberg College – for three canvass launches in support of Susan Wild.
Wild is an outspoken community leader, attorney, and 60-year-old mother of two. She is running for a seat in Pennsylvania’s newly redistricted 7th Congressional District, based around Allentown and the Lehigh Valley, which is currently Republican controlled. Endorsed by Emily’s List and NARAL, she won the Democratic primary over five male candidates and is the only woman to run in this district.
The significance of this specific race is that it could singlehandedly determine whether or not the House of Representatives is flipped blue. Earlier this year, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court found that the state’s congressional district map constituted an illegal partisan gerrymander. The court instated a remedial map for this election cycle, but not without backlash – as this seat in congress is one of the most highly contested. In 2016, Hillary Clinton beat Donald Trump in this seat by only 1.1% because of party divides between counties that make up the district.
Having grown up in a military family and lived in the 7th District for over 30 years, Wild is touting an authentic connection to and understanding of the people and communities – including the Jewish community – that she aspires to represent. Meeting her, I found her undeniably tough, but also gregarious and approachable with a warm smile, a strong presence, and a relatable sense of humor. She loves to talk about of the joy she experiences spending time at her home garden with her dog.
“The Torah teaches us to ‘love your neighbor as you love yourself.’ In Washington, we’ve seen a lot more ‘love yourself’ than ‘love your neighbor’ in recent years,” Susan Wild told us. “I’m seeking to change that. Jewish values such as Tikkun Olam inform my platform of protecting Social Security and Medicare, defending women’s reproductive choices, and working for equal opportunity for all.
Wild is a groundbreaker who has dedicated her life in the public sphere. She was confirmed by the City Council as the first woman Solicitor of the City of Allentown, and if she wins by the modest margin that she is projected to win by as of now, she will become the Lehigh Valley’s first woman representative in Congress.
At her canvassing launches, Wild confidently spoke across multiple intersecting issues: healthcare, education, job creation, minimum wage, climate change, social security, prison reform, access to safe and legal abortion and family planning, and restorative justice.
“The environment used to be a bipartisan issue, all of a sudden it’s not. All of a sudden, people in Washington don’t care about what our streams and rivers and air look like,” Wild said.
A vocal advocate for abortion rights, Wild is running against Marty Nothstein (R), also-Jewish, an anti-choicer who compares himself to Donald Trump.
When asked about why she’s running, Wild responded: “What got me into this race in the first place is my children—my daughter is 22 and my son is 25. I am so worried about their generation, the generations to follow, and the country we are leaving behind for them.
What keeps her fire fueled are the working families and the people who are struggling to pay their bills, their utilities, their healthcare, and who just feel like Washington has left them behind.
“Because you know what?” she said, “I think it has. We have to have living wages. $7.25 an hour is unconscionable. ”
Wild doesn’t take any corporate PAC money, like many insurgent candidates running in this election. Senator Bob Casey, who spoke at Wild’s canvassing events, emphasizes the importance of Wild’s pledge against corporate PAC money: “This is a corporate special interests take over of the United States government. Corporate special interests run the house, they run the senate, and they have disproportionate -if not overwhelming – influence on the executive branch. And as of a week ago today, they got their 5th vote on the third branch of government, the United States Supreme Court.”
Constituents, mostly women and girls, of all ages showed up in numbers to express their passionate support for Wild,
“I’m voting for Susan Wild because we’re in the worst political climate of my life. We are being priced out of our housing, the food is going up…everything is going up, except for my social security,” Valerie Chambers, a resident of Allentown Pennsylvania told me.
Abbi Jacobson – co-creator and star of the hit Jewish feminist Comedy Central series Broad City who grew up in Pennsylvania– came to Allentown from Brooklyn to show support for Wild. In their matching “A Wild Woman Belongs in the House” shirts, Jacobson and Wild discussed the importance of getting people under 30 years old out to vote.
As Jacobson pronounced, “She is so rad.”
“We’ve had students out canvassing for us and it’s because they understand what the future looks like if we don’t elect a new wave of candidates, who frankly haven’t been politicians before. The people who are running this year are moms, people who have left their private jobs, and people who just desperately care about the future of our country,” said Wild.
though there is a vehement push to get Americans under 30 to vote, a majority of young Americans feel hopeless or believe that they cannot affect what the government does. Or, they’re simply too busy to fully engage past an Instagram post.
But what struck me most about the attitudes of the women who came out to support Wild was not just their excitement, but the fearlessness in their anger as well. The anger at the blatant injustices of a government that is behaving more like a boy’s club. At the events, everyone could speak out without feeling pressure to “calm down” or sweep anything under the rug. I left feeling that as angry as we can stand to get, let’s get there. —Shira Gorelick"
Monday, October 15, 2018
Tuesday, October 9, 2018
On the Trail With Nevada Senate Hopeful Jacky Rosen for Lilith Magazine, October 2018
"Nevada’s Senate race is one of the most hotly contested in the
country—pitting former Synagogue president and current Democratic
congresswoman Jacky Rosen against
incumbent Dean Heller. It’s such an important race, and in such a dead
heat, that President Trump himself is coming to town to stump for
Rosen’s opponent.
Lilith’s photographer Joan Roth went out to Nevada to document Jacky Rosen’s campaign, watching up close as she met voters, shook hands, talked issues— and of course posed for selfies. Rosen, who has been her district’s House representative, has been making an effort to connect with Nevada voters from all walks of life.
A selection of images follow below."
Lilith’s photographer Joan Roth went out to Nevada to document Jacky Rosen’s campaign, watching up close as she met voters, shook hands, talked issues— and of course posed for selfies. Rosen, who has been her district’s House representative, has been making an effort to connect with Nevada voters from all walks of life.
A selection of images follow below."
Tuesday, August 28, 2018
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