Councilman Leroy Comrie: "They [JCAL] do wonderful work
in the arts; they just dropped the ball with this."
JCAL Director of Programs Alan Lynes : "It’s the kind
of piece that elicits a strong response … Some people were very supportive and
some people were very offended. We thought it was done gracefully. Yes, it’s
breathtaking, but we shouldn’t forget the loss of life.
Although JCAL’s Harlan Chaney, claimed this is not
"shock art," many disagreed.
In recent years, we’ve seen a religious group’s attempt
to cover naked statues at the Queens Museum, a Mayor objecting to a feces
covered depiction of the Virgin Mary, and just last week, a public outcry
against an artist sculpture of a 9-11 splattered woman caused its removal from
Rockefeller Center.
Last week’s PRESS editorial insisted,
"Regardless of what your opinion of the piece is, there is one thing that
is clear.
"Art makes you think, and thinking improves our
dialogue, our minds, and our democracy.
"When art is the impetus for discussion and debate, only
learning and understanding can come out of it.

Last week's
PRESS of Southeast Queens. |
"In this instance, it has opened up a dialogue on an
important piece of history and brought the discussion to street level. It’s
gotten people looking at the Center, thinking about that day, and expanding
their perspectives.
"We are pleased that the artist did not have to be
afraid and used her freedom of speech to its fullest.
And we encourage our readers to do the same."
JCAL will still be hosting a public Q&A session with the
artist on Oct. 1 at 7 p.m. but our borough has already lost a chance to grow
from this free expression.
When art and controversy share a canvas, discussions of
culture come to the kitchen table. People get involved and interested and begin
to think.
Art is beautiful.
Provocative art is beautiful for a whole different set of
reasons.
A Not-So-Gentle Email
Michael,
I am shocked that you have not commented with regards
to Councilmember Charles Barron’s invitation to Robert Mugabe,
Zimbabwe’s dictator, who addressed the entire Council in City Hall’s
Chambers.
As well documented, Mugabe’s irrational
land-seizure program could potentially cause the starvation of millions
in his nation. Even Amnesty International has criticized him for
this.
This is outrageous to think that this man was an
honored guest at the citizens of New York’s City Hall! And to
add to this, not one of Barron’s colleagues had the backbone to step
up and publicly rebuke him for this.
These are the same council-members that you have
glowingly referred to in several of your prior columns. I am also
disappointed that – as a loyal reader and admirer of your work – you
did not use your column to comment on this story.
While I am a strong believer in free speech, I also
believe the
councilmembers of New York should not have be held captive to the
rantings of an ideologue, when they should be working on behalf of the
taxpaying public. I also believe that councilmembers and
journalists who work hard to protect and encourage these rights, have a
responsibility to exercise them on behalf of the public.
P.S.: while I am disappointed, I will still
read. It’s only strike one!
Thanks, Keith Walsh, Maspeth
Keith: You’ve done the job well for both of us. Thanx, Mike
Ethnic Redistricting
Politics
There’s an on-going debate whether political lines
should be drawn to group people of the same ethnicity in the same
district. It certainly makes sense if we believe needs and desires are
ethnically based. It also can enable an ethnic minority to have elected
representation.
In last year’s Council election, we saw the first
Asian American and Hispanic American elected to office from Queens.
Flushing’s John Liu and Corona’s Hiram Monserratte indeed ethnically
mirror the communities they represent. District lines were compact,
contiguous and resulted in meaningful representation.
Eight years earlier, a tri-county, badly
gerrymandered district – known as the "Bullwinkle" district
because of it’s boundaries roughly mimicked the shape of the cartoon
character’s head – was drawn to elect a Latino to Congress. Nydia
Velazquez won the Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan seat with the smallest
turnout in a hotly contested Congressional Primary that this writer
recalls. Several years later, the Supreme Court struck down the "Bullwinkle"
District and two others in the country that were gerrymandered just
because of ethnicity. Although ethnic makeup was valid to be considered,
the court refused to allow it to be the overriding consideration.
The district was redrawn in a manner to comply with
the court’s vague directives and enable incumbent Velazquez to retain
the seat.
This year, redistricting created three Queens seats
drawn to enable minority representation: Flushing’s 22nd Assembly
District drawn for an Asian, and drawn for Latinos, Jackson Heights 39th
A.D. and Elmhurst’s 13th Senate District. The lines apparently comply
with court mandates.
In these three districts, winning the Democratic
Primary usually assures an election night victory. Jose Peralta was the
only ethnic minority candidate to win. Peralta beat two other Latino
candidates and will be Queens’ first Hispanic in Albany.
Barry Grodenchik a white Jewish Democratic district
leader won the 22nd AD over two Chinese and a south Asian candidate.
Grodenchik had only 36.85 percent of the vote. The two Chinese
candidates – Jimmy Meng and Ethel Chen – had a combined total of 55
percent. Although no one can be sure, it seems likely, that had only one
of the two Chinese candidates been in the race, they would have won.
Grodenchik now has two years of incumbency to win overthe Asian voters.
It seems likely that even with the advantages of
incumbency, should Grodenchik, at any time in the future, have to run
head-on against a single strong Asian candidate, the seat could change
hands.
Slightly to the west, longtime District Leader and
former Councilman John Sabini won the 13th Senate District with 44.5
percent of the vote. The remaining 55.5 percent was split between two
Latino candidates. Although the future is not as ominous for Sabini as
it maybe for Grodenchik, Sabini may not have been the victor had he
faced one Latino candidate with united support.
Ethnic and national differences may prevent the
Chinese in the 22nd A.D. from unifying, while political and national
differences may prevent the Latinos in the 13 S.D. from uniting behind a
single candidate in the future. However, we would expect that with the
changing population, the registration of more minority voters and the
maturation of new Americans entering the political process, that when
this decade ends, the number of members of ethnic minorities in elected
positions and positions of power, will increase.
It’s a good thing.
Politics: Crossing
Over?
Those of you who read this column regularly are aware
that the New York State Legislature is not one of my favorite
deliberative or legislative bodies. The gang that can’t pass a budget
on time is an embarrassment to the people of this State. Decisions on
anything that matters in the legislature are made by two people –
Senate Majority Leader Joe Bruno and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
They’ll consult the Guv, if they have to. But it seems that all they
care about is preserving their own power.
I don’t know what goes on in the other 49 states,
but I’d be surprised if there are any worse. Yeah, New York is at the
bottom.
And so, I was not the least bit surprised when I
emailed an inquiry to an old Queens list of Assembly members and quickly
got back an auto-response from Assemblywoman Pauline Cummings
representing the 31st District of southeast Queens.
As you can see from the email, Cummings comments
about the volume of email she receives and gives her Albany and Far
Rockaway office addresses and phone numbers in case more than an
automatic email response is needed.
No, we really don’t need anything else. We were in
fact rather surprised that Cummings responded to us at all. You see, she
died nine months ago.
And it’s not the least bit surprising that no one
has bothered to update the mail server of the NYS Assembly.
We’ve seen how quickly they pass a budget; they’ll
get around to it someday.
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| Not4Publication.com
by Dom Nunziato |
Michael Schenkler can be reached at: MSchenkler@queenspress.com