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HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS

IN CELEBRATION OF WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH, NYC & COMPANY ENCOURAGES NEW YORKERS AND VISITORS TO SUPPORT WOMEN-OWNED AND WOMEN-OPERATED BUSINESSES IN MARCH AND BEYOND

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In celebration of Women’s History Month kicking off March 1 and International Women’s Day on March 8, NYC & Company, the official destination marketing organization and convention and visitors bureau for the five boroughs of New York City, is encouraging New Yorkers and visitors to support women-owned and women-operated businesses including hotels, restaurants and shops and to explore countless cultural offerings and sites of historical significance all year-round, with an “NYC-cation” in the five boroughs.

“As Women’s History Month kicks off, NYC & Company proudly celebrates all the women who have made and continue to make an indelible mark on New York City. Female-owned and -operated businesses are so vital to our City and our industry, and we invite New Yorkers and visitors to support these enterprises now and into the future. It’s my honor and privilege to celebrate these women today and every day alongside my wonderful and talented female colleagues at NYC & Company,” said Nancy Mammana, NYC & Company’s chief marketing officer.

Those exploring the City are asked to wear masks, practice social distancing and frequently wash and sanitize hands, as indicated in NYC & Company’s Stay Well Pledge, and check with individual businesses for current operating status and hours, as well as health and safety protocols, prior to visiting.

You can explore Arts and Culture Spotlighting the Lives and Work of Women:

The Alice Austen House Museum honors the life and work of celebrated photographer Alice Austen, who lived in the historic Staten Island home during the early 20th century. Also a national site of LGBTQ+ history, the museum is presenting Powerful and Dangerous: The Words and Images of Audre Lorde and will offer private afternoon tours, Tuesday through Friday.

From March 20-21, Harlem’s iconic Apollo Theater will offer its fifth bi-annual WOW - Women of the World Festival. This year’s virtual event is themed Black Women Transcending! and will include music, film, workshops, panels, performances and more.

On March 5, the Brooklyn Museum will unveil Lorraine O’Grady: Both/ And, the first retrospective of the contemporary feminist artist, on view through July 18. The museum is also the permanent home of The Dinner Party by Judy Chicago, an iconic piece of 1970s feminist art. · The Met Fifth Avenue will present Alice Neel: People Come First from March 22 through August 1, showcasing approximately 100 pieces by the radical feminist painter and champion of social justice who called East Harlem home. · From March 11 through September 6, MoMA PS1 in Queens will spotlight over 100 artworks by French American feminist and activist artist Niki de Saint Phalle in Niki de Saint Phalle: Structures for Life. · Morris-Jumel Mansion is Manhattan’s oldest surviving residence, built in 1765 for British Colonel Roger Morris and his wife, Mary Philipse. The Washington Heights museum, which is currently open to the public, also offers a glimpse into the home’s first female owner with a Virtual Parlor Chat: Who was the Real Mary Philipse Morris?

On March 18, the National Museum of the American Indian will present Native Women Making Change as part of its Youth in Action: Conversations about Our Future series. In this free virtual program, Aidan Graybill (Wyandot Nation of Kansas) and Representative Christina Haswood (Diné [Navajo]) will discuss the roles Indigenous women uphold within their communities and society at large.

While temporarily closed to the public, New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem is presenting Femmetography: The Gaze Shifted, an online gallery and resource exploring photography from the perspective of Black women, curated as part of the center’s Teen Curators program.

Celebrating the centennial of the 19th Amendment, which gave American women the right to vote, the Staten Island Museum is exploring the borough’s role in the suffrage movement in Women of the Nation Arise!.

McNally Jackson is one of New York City’s most-recognized independent bookstores, with locations in Nolita, the Seaport District, Williamsburg, and Downtown Brooklyn.

María Herron opened Mil Mundos Books in Bushwick in 2018, with the goal of ensuring community access and empowerment. Nearly half of the bookstore’s titles are available in Spanish.

Started by Eliza Blank, The Sill plant shop has locations on Manhattan’s Lower East Side and Upper West Side, and in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. The company also offers a plant delivery service, online workshops, gift cards and more.

Visit Parks and Outdoor Sites Honoring Women:

On Manhattan’s Far West Side near Hudson Yards, Bella Abzug Park is named in honor of feminist, civil rights activist, lawyer and U.S. Representative Bella Abzug. ·In March 2017, the Fearless Girl statue symbolizing female empowerment was unveiled in front of Lower Manhattan’s Charging Bull statue. Now located opposite the New York Stock Exchange, the four-foot bronze statue was created by artist Kristen Visbal.

Brooklyn’s East River State Park has officially been renamed Marsha P. Johnson State Park, in memory of the influential LGBTQ+ civil rights activist. The park, which is undergoing renovations to be completed by June, is New York’s first state park honoring a LGBTQ+ person and transgender woman of color. · Honoring the first African American Congresswoman and first woman and African American to run for President, Shirley Chisholm State Park in Brooklyn offers trails for biking and hiking, fishing, birding and more, all with panoramic views of NYC and the New York Harbor.

At Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, honor women who helped shape the nation and New York City today, including women’s suffrage supporters Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, Mary Garrett Hay and Alva Vanderbilt Belmont.

A new Women’s Rights Pioneers Monument was unveiled last year on Central Park’s Literary Walk, the park’s first statue depicting nonfiction female figures: women’s right activists Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Sojourner Truth.

To learn more about prominent female figures in New York City’s history, check out NYC & Company’s guide to The Women Who Made NYC History.

The “NYC-cations” initiative supports All In NYC: Staycation Guides, which is part of NYC & Company’s All In NYC local revitalization effort.

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WENDY HILLIARD: The Big Heart of a Champion

By Hazel Rosetta Smith

Wendy Hilliard has been a force to be reckoned with in the world of sports, an arena in which she was surely born to conquer. When the long years of gymnastic competition ended, it was not a done deal for Hilliard. Her life’s purpose and a plan came to fruition.

Since 1996, WHGF, The Wendy Hilliard Gymnastics Foundation, has provided FREE gymnastics for over 10,000 inner city youth in NYC. She has utilized her knowledge in partnership with her heart to turn minds and train the bodies of youngsters toward their greatest potential.

From the profile below, you will get a glimpse of the illustrious career of a Black woman who would not be denied what she rightfully deserved having the ability and willingness to develop the capabilities that create champions. A champion is as a champion does.

Born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, swimming was the beginning of what could have been an entry into the world of sports for Wendy Hilliard. After watching gymnastics on television, Wendy’s interest took a turn and opportunities opened for training by coaches that were brought in from what was then the Soviet Union. Wendy studied the Russian language at Wayne State University in Detroit.

After years of hard training with determi-

Wendy Hilliard

nation and steadfast devotion, working through innuendos and insinuations, her spirit rose to a mindset of advocacy for Black athletes. She would prevail and the proof would be in putting her best to the test.

In 1978, she became the first African American to represent the United States in international competitions and remained on the Rhythmic Gymnastics National Team a record-setting nine times; serving twice as National Team Captain.

As a National and International Gold Medalist, Hilliard, represented the U.S. in over 15 foreign countries and three World Championships (1979, 1981, 1983). She has performed with the world’s finest gymnasts and choreographed for Olympic Gold Medalist, Dominique Dawes.

Retiring from competition in 1988, Wendy stayed with her sport and became a four-time U.S. National Team Coach. Her gymnast, Aliane Baquerot, was a 1996 Olympian.

In 1995, Wendy Hilliard was the first African American and first gymnast to become the President of the Women’s Sports Foundation, the leading organization for women’s sports issues. She was the athlete representative for gymnastics to the United States Olympic Committee and served on the Executive Committee of USA Gymnastics for over ten years.

In 2006, through her non-profit WHGF, Wendy designed and opened a 15,000 square foot gymnastics center for Aviator Sports and Recreation; a modern day multi-million/multi-sport complex in Brooklyn, NY.

In 2008, Wendy was inducted into the USA Gymnastics Hall of Fame. In 2011, she was awarded the Rings of Gold from the U.S. Olympic Committee for her work helping children develop their Olympic dreams.

She was Director of Sports for NYC 2012, in the city’s bid for the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. As a member of the NYC 2012 Senior Staff, her responsibilities included overseeing all the sports and athlete matters, including over 2,000 Olympians and Paralympians worldwide that supported the bid.

Wendy was instrumental in bringing several international events to NYC that included the Freestyle Wrestling World Championships held at Madison Square Garden, the Archery World Championships, and the Fencing World Cup. She was the lead in developing the NYC

Hilliard practice

Wendy Hilliard

Triathlon which has become an annual soldout event. Hilliard’s big championship heart remains wide open in an embrace of encouragement to sports enthusiasts of all ages serving as a sports consultant with Aviator Sports and Recreation and the Riverbank State Park. And additionally, on the boards of the Armory Foundation, Special Olympics Urban Initiative, and the NYC Sports Commission. She conducts clinics worldwide and is a guest performer, announcer and choreographer for gymnastic tours and television specials.

On behalf of Black youth on their way to gold, I say to Wendy Hilliard in this 2021 Women’s Month of March, “ashay, ashay, continue to make things happen.” [Hazel Rosetta Smith is a journalist, playwright, and artistic director for HRS Productions, retired former Managing Editor and Woman’s Editor for the New York Beacon News and current columnist for Harlem Community News Inc. Contact: misshazel@twc. com]

BROOKLYN UPCOMING EVENTS

Saturdays Until June 5 11:00-12:00pm

FREE Family Culture Fest

The Billie Presents the FREE Family Culture Fest 2020, an interactive weekly series created to get the entire family up and moving. You and your family will have the opportunity to learn from world-class instructors in the fields of mediation, yoga, dance, and African drumming from your own home. View online at thebillieholiday.org

Thursdays Until

July 15 7:15-8:15pm

Arts Academy Speak The Speech

Students will explore Acting techniques through various texts from African-American Authors. For ages 9-18. Join online at thebillieholiday.org $10

Now Until

December 2021

Classic Films at BAM

Presenting classic films, premieres, festivals, and retrospectives, with appearances by filmmakers, actors, and critics. Watch films like “Happy Together”, “In the Mood for Love”, “Chungking Express” and more at bam.org $12 each.

Now Until March 14

Imagine & Restore: Yoga for All Ages

Play, relax, and restore with BAM teaching artist and yoga instructor ChiaTi Chiu. This series of FREE on-demand workshops invites the whole family to take a moment for physical and mental wellness. Chiu offers kids a creative space to explore fun new movements and let their imaginations roam, while sessions geared towards adults encourage you to connect with your body and recharge. Join online at bam.org

March 4-10 All Day

Contemporary

Arab Cinema

The beauty, complexity, and diversity of Arab culture shines in these vital new works from some of the Middle East and North Africa’s boldest filmmakers. This series returns for its third year in our virtual cinemas, featuring thrillers, tales of forbidden love, socio political upheaval, women’s rights, and tradition. Watch at bam.org tickets $75 for all films or $12 per film.

March 4-5 7:00pm

Bernanda’s Daughters (work-in-progress)

Bernarda’s Daughters (work-in-progress) is an exploration of private and public grief that asks when, where, what, and whom do we mourn. Online at bricartsmedia.org FREE.

March 4 6:30-8:00pm

NYC Transit x

New York Nico

Join Nicolas Heller and Transit Museum staff online for a look at public service announcements (PSAs) from the Museum’s archives and learn more about this latest PSA project. Hear behind-the-scenes stories about how @NewYorkNico’s social media followers helped finalize the list of icons, how announcements were recorded, and how the project came together to bring joy and a sense of New York pride to transit riders. Online at nytransitmuseum.org FREE.

March 4 5:30-7:30pm

Art and Empathy: Community Care Through Art

Join art therapist Sarah Pousty, museum educator Dalila Scruggs, and social work intern Lula Zeray as we make space for self-care, conversation, and connection. You’ll rest and reflect in community, explore a work of art in depth through close looking and discussion, then create artworks of our own. Online for FREE at brooklynmuseum.org

March 4 10:00am

Youth Media

Careers Day

Calling all next-generation filmmakers and media professionals! At Teen Media Careers Day, students in grades 8 and up can explore BRIC’s media resources and learn about possible opportunities and careers in media fields. This virtual event includes demonstrations and a panel discussion featuring young media professionals. Online at bricartsmedia.org FREE.

March 10 6:30pm

Framing U.S. History: The Thorny Business of Teaching the Past

Competing narratives about slavery, white supremacy, indigenous peoples, colonization, and so much more are all presented as fundamental truth. Who should hold power over the history we teach? How do we guide students to understand the past, and therefore the present? Ansley T. Erickson, Associate Professor of History and Education Policy and Co-Director of the Center on History and Education at Teachers College, Columbia University, moderates this conversation with Hasan Kwame Jeffries, Associate Professor of History at The Ohio State University and host of the podcast Teaching Hard History: American Slavery; Errol C. Saunders, II, a fifteen-year veteran history teacher and the Executive Director of Pathfinder at Hopkins School; and Kerry Foraker Green, a public school educator in Dallas County, Texas where she teaches secondary U.S. History. Online at brooklynhistory.org FREE.

framing us history (Mar 10)

youth media career day (Mar 4)

March 10 5:00-6:30pm

BkM Teens Soul Sessions: LGBTQ+ Past and Present

This month, members of InterseXtions lead activities and discussions centered on LGBTQ+ representations in art and media. This online program is FREE and open to all youth ages 14–22. Brooklynmuseum.org

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