TEAM Westport Responds To Diversity Essay Controversy

In response to the uproar that followed announcement of TEAM Westport’s 9th annual Teen Diversity Essay Contest, Harold Bailey — chair of the town’s multiculutral organization — issued this statement:

In TEAM Westport’s 19-year history, there is no initiative of which we are more proud than the annual Teen Diversity Essay Contest.

Over the past 8 years, it is also the initiative which has garnered the greatest acclaim and respect for the town of Westport. From school systems regionally, statewide, and nationally to CNN, the stature of the town has been raised and the town has responded to the insights of its youth with a combination of respect, pride and (often) awe.

In general, the awe has been due to the breath-taking courage and talent required of winning essayists to deliver their searing insights with genuinely brilliant language. Those insights have included first-hand accounts of the impact of “othering” written by White, Black, Asian-American, Latinx, etc. students providing their voices on aspects of race, religion, ethnicity and LGBTQ-IA+ (TEAM Westport’s focus areas by charter).  We invite you to read all 25 winning essays at www.westportct.gov/essays.

Now, through a combination of website and emails, anonymous source(s) have declared that

  • Insights from African-American, Asian-American, Latinx and White students about the toxicity of racial micro-aggressions on their lives and their peers were racist.
  • A White student’s exposition of her marginalization due to the “dumb blonde” stereotypes was unconstitutional.
  • The frank discussion of the marginalization faced by an LGBTQ-IA+ student after coming out was un-American.

Essentially, these anonymous source(s) contend that the Town of Westport should be outraged that these voices were ever heard and ensure that no others are heard in the future.

Last year’s TEAM Westport Teen Essay Contest finalists (from left): Curtis Sullivan, Maxwell Tanksley, Jaden Mello.

That contention is patently absurd and diametrically opposed to the town of Westport’s “Statement on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion,” ratified by the Board of Selectmen (including our current first aelectwoman) on October 13.

It is one thing to criticize adults with a viciousness including accusations of Nazi-ism, but far more troubling to dismiss the insights of our children as ideology trolling for dollars while bullying future participants and their parents.

(From left): TEAM Westport chair Harold Bailey, with essay contest winners Chet Ellis, Angela Ji, Daniel Boccardo and Olivia Sarno.

The TEAM Westport Teen Diversity Essay Contest was created to give teens in our community an opportunity to reflect on, express, and open up constructive conversations about race and identity based on each teen’s lived experience. If you support the Teen Diversity Essay Contest and its continuation, there are two ways you can help:

  1. Say so. Send an email addressed to the RTM (RTM-DL@westportct.gov), Board of Selectmen (selectman@westportct.gov), Board of Education (boe@westportps.org) and Superintendent of Schools (tscarice@westportps.org).
  2. Contribute. TEAM Westport receives no funding from the town of Westport. All contest prizes are funded via independent contributions. Tax deductible contributions may be made via to TEAM Westport, c/o Department of Finance, Town Hall, 110 Myrtle Avenue, Westport, CT 06880.
  3. TEAM Westport contest judges (from left) Jaina Shaw and Dr. Judith Hamer, and (far right) Mary-Lou Weisman flank 2016 essay contest winners Ellie Shapiro, Ali Tritschler and Jacob Klegar.

Westporter Kicks Off Literary Career With Queen Of Judo

You probably never heard of Rusty Kanokogi.

But in 1959 — disguised as a man — she won a medal at a judo tournament. When officials realized her gender, she was forced to return it.

Rusty Kanokogi

She did not take the injustice lying down. Kanokogi headed to Japan to continue training. She became the first woman to join a men’s group, then fought for judo to be included in the Olympics — a reality in 1988.

Not bad for a Jewish girl from Brooklyn, born Rena Glickman.

She overcame many odds to become “The Mother of Women’s Judo.” Now Eve Nadel Catarevas has battled many obstacles to tell Kanakogi’s story, in a children’s book.

After a career as a copywriter, interrupted by years raising her son, it’s the Westporter’s first book.

Catarevas was raised in Greenwich. After Boston College, she worked for Bristol Myers Squibb and Condé Nast.

She knew Westport from visits here with her parents — she recalls the Remarkable Book Shop and Ice Cream Parlor — and settled here with her husband Michael, a writer. She raised their son Ben.

When he was grown, she decided to act on her urge to write. She found a group of local authors, and honed in on children’s literature.

Eve Nadel Catarevas

Since she was a child, she read obituaries. She was interested in underdog stories, and when Kanokogi died in 2009, Catarevas was intrigued by her life. The only other place she read about Jewish girls she says, is in Holocaust-themed books.

Besides a couple of stories in Sports Illustrated and Hadassah, there was little written about Kanokogi. And, Catarevas admits, judo is “not the sexiest sport.”

Writing the book was difficult enough. Finding a publisher was even harder. There’s not a lot of market for children’s books about Jewish female judo experts.

In addition, the author admits, her subject was “not a delicate flower. She was a tough broad.”

Yet, she adds, “We all know about Billie Jean King, and other women sports pioneers. Rusty deserved to be known too. I wanted to bring her into the light.”

Catarevas found Kar-Ben, a publisher specializing in Jewish-themed material. The official publication date for Rena Glickman, Queen of Judo  is May 2. It’s gotten strong pre-publication reviews.

Catarevas’ first book took more than a decade to finish and publish. Her second is already in the works.

It’s another children’s book, about a pioneering woman.

Annie Malone created a cosmetics line for Black women. She became one of the first African-American female millionaires.

You may not have heard of her, either.

Thanks to Eve Catarevas, you will soon.

(To pre-order Rena Glickman, Queen of Judo, click here.)

Pics Of The Day #1747

One view of the Compo Beach jetty with ice … (Photo/MaryLou Roels)

… and another (Photo/Cathy Malkin)

Town Officials: Be Prepared!

In advance of an expected major snowstorm, town officials tell residents: “Be self-sufficient for up to 72 hours with enough food, water and medications to shelter in place, should a natural disaster take place.

POLICE, FIRE, EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES:
Call 911 for all emergencies, including TDD calls.

FOR NON-EMERGENCIES:
• Police: 203-341-6000
• Fire:  203-341-5010
• EMS: 203-341-6081
• Health District: 203-227-9571
• Department of Human Services: 203-341-1050

To sign up for the town’s NIXLE emergency notification system (a telephone communication service that delivers customized emergency messages directly to homes and business, click here or text “06880” to 888777.

We’re predicted to get to 5 to 12 inches of snow. Winds will blow most of the day tomorrow, and temperatures will not get out of the low 20s.

The best way to stay informed about weather-related advisories, alerts and community messages is to register for the Human Services assistance programs, and utilize local news and information resources including the town’s website (www.westportct.gov) and Facebook page.

Additional updates may be posted on the Westport Fire Department
Facebook page, and on Staples High School radio station WWPT (90.3 FM).

The Voluntary Registry for People with Disabilities is offered in partnership with the Westport Police Department. It is a confidential registry service assisting officers and other emergency services personnel in the event of an incident involving vulnerable citizens with disabilities.

Contact the Department of Human Services (203-341-1050) or email humansrv@westportct.gov.

• Westport Public Schools Emergency Line: 203-341-1766
Eversource: 800-286-2000 (Residents with a medical condition should sign up with Eversource as a priority restoration)
• Optimum/ALTICE: 866-200-7273.

Friday Flashback #281

Most Fridays, I try to connect our Flashbacks to something. The season, an event or person in the news — whatever works.

This week, there’s no connection to anything. It’s just Rodney Dangerfield from a “Tonight Show” appearance with Johnny Carson, from 1983.

He’s his usual lightning-one-liner self. What makes this “06880”-worthy is that in the first minute, he talks about moving to Westport. With, of course, a joke.

If you’ve got any Rodney Dangerfield stories from his time here, click “Comments” below.

And remember: He died in 2004. Show him some respect. (Hat tip: Jeff Mitchell)

Roundup: Jim Ryan …

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Longtime Westporter and sports volunteer Jim Ryan died Monday. He was 76.

The Queens native was president of his Holy Cross High School class. After graduating from St John’s University, he began a career in accounting.

Jim lived here for nearly 50 years. His family was his pride and joy. He devoted his life to caring for his children, and was involved in their various activities. He was a soccer, basketball, and softball coach for years, and a past president of the Westport Soccer Association. His favorite teams were the New York Mets and Jets. He was also a longtime parishioner and supporter of St. Luke Church.

He is survived by his daughters Kim Constantino (Bill) of Westport; Kellie Ryan (Paul Ouimette) of Trumbull, and Kristin Beirne (Chris) of Fairfield; grandchildren Ashley and Kaitlyn Constantino, Ryan and Reese Ouimette, and Alexandra and Grayson Beirne; his former wife Joan Ryan of Westport, and brother Ed Ryan Jr. of Monroe. He was predeceased by his older sister Carol Ryan-Smith.

The family will receive relatives and friends on Monday (January 31, 4 to 7 p.m., Harding Funeral Home, Westport). A Mass of Christian burial will be held Tuesday (February 1, 10 a.m., St. Luke Church, Westport). Masks are required at both.

Jim Ryan

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The Westport PAL Longshore Ice Rink may not be “natural” — but June Rose Whittaker calls today’s “Westport … Naturally” image “The Calm Before the Storm.” And there’s nothing like a threat from Mother Nature to make us both vigilant and appreciative of all that we have here.

(Photo/June Rose Whittaker)

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And finally … David Mugar died Tuesday, at 82. You may not know the Boston businessman and philanthropist — but he’s the person who, in 1973, suggested to Boston Pops conductor Arthur Fiedler that playing the “1812 Overture” — with fireworks, church bells and cannons — might reignite flagging interest in the orchestra’s annual July 4th concert on the Esplanade.

It did. Mugar produced the spectacular for the next 43 years.

Website Slams TEAM Westport Diversity Essay Contest

TEAM Westport announced its 9th annual Teen Diversity Essay topic.

“Westport Parents 06880” are not pleased.

The prompt — “describe what you would like to explain to people in your community who avoid or struggle with talking about race, or acknowledging systemic racism, or who apply a ‘color blind’ approach to issues” — prompted the anonymous website formed out of “concerns about the increasing focus on assertions of racism in our community,” and which fights “political activism and moralizing intrusions in the classroom” to issue a lengthy statement opposing the contest.

It begins: “The contest is explicitly targeting ‘students attending high school in Westport,’ which of course means Staples High School, one of three high schools in Westport alongside the two much smaller private schools.” (In fact, previous essay winners have come from Choate and Hopkins, as well as Greens Farms Academy.)

The statement continues:

The essay prompt is unsurprising given this organization’s ongoing efforts to impose its neoracist ideology (to borrow a term used by the African-American Columbia linguistics professor John McWhorter) on nearly every part of our town.

This year’s topic — essentially asking our children to deconstruct a “colorblind” approach to race — only represents an escalation of its campaign to discredit basic Constitutional principles that have defined and united Americans from our founding. What TEAM is doing here is not only morally wrong, it is a blatant violation of adopted Westport Board of Education policy on essay contests which prohibits contests “that tend to promote or advertise a product or an ideology.” We call upon Town leaders and the Board of Education in particular to take immediate action.

Formed with the seemingly benign mission of “achieving and celebrating ‘a more welcoming, multicultural community’,” TEAM now fluidly operates as a sort of amorphous auxiliary unit within Westport municipal government. TEAM is formally housed within the Selectman’s office but is composed of numerous elected officials, ordinary townsfolk and even residents of Weston. For reasons one can only speculate upon, TEAM seems to have carte blanche to intervene in our schools and numerous other areas of Town government. TEAM’s unelected leadership appears to be accountable to no one, while playing a role in nearly every facet of Westport civic life, from our schools to the library to the police force to the art work that appears in Town Hall.

Screenshot of the “Westport Parents 06880” home page.

The parents in the group “do not object in the least to TEAM’s mission of celebrating diversity or the existence of a properly regulated body that would pursue such a straightforward mission,” they say.

They do object, however, to

how TEAM’s philosophy has evolved into a sort of militant “wokeness,” aggressively pushing a single (and in our view toxic) narrative around racial issues. This ideology has manifested itself through the concept of ‘equity’ that has been pushed across Town government. As we await the Superintendent’s recommendations following the equity study conducted by the NYU Metro Center, equity is perhaps weeks away from becoming the official dogma of our public schools.

The choice to target a “colorblind” approach cuts to the heart of the ideological cliff over which TEAM seeks to push our wonderful diverse community. As anyone with a basic understanding of anti-discrimination law understands, because of our country’s dark history with segregation, we have wide-ranging prohibitions against consideration of race or skin color. The new “woke” mentality, which has clearly been embraced by TEAM, is to reinsert consideration of race or skin color into everyday life, as a form of “good” segregation.

Dr. Ibram X. Kendi

After quoting Ibram X. Kendi — the National Book Award for Nonfiction who was the 2018 Martin Luther King Day keynote speaker here, and has since worked on anti-racism training in Westport — the website says:

TEAM’s new mission appears to be a revival of racial discrimination in Westport. Presumably, it will fall upon the unelected leadership of TEAM to decide how and when such racial discrimination takes place to achieve the antiracist equitable outcomes they desire.

Westport as a community, and its elected leadership in particular, must stand against this paradigm shift in racial understanding which so plainly disrespects the principle of equality embedded in our Constitution and so many of our laws.

The statement concludes:

When they were inaugurated, every single one of Westport’s elected officials swore an oath to support the Constitution of the United States. We ask them all to live up to that oath and denounce TEAM’s relentless efforts to undermine the principle of racial equality and equal treatment under the law. We ask the Board of Education in particular to enforce its own policies and take immediate action to sever any link between Staples High School and the new TEAM essay contest.

We urge parents of high school students in Westport to discourage their children from participating in this odious attempt to use financial incentives to impress a severely defective ideology upon them.

NOTE: It is an “06880” rule that all commenters must use full, real names. Last night, I removed several comments from a previous story about TEAM Westport. The comments — all condemning the committee and its essay contest — were posted using fake names and false email addresses. If you have an opinion, we’d love to hear it. But we must know who stands behind it. Thank you for abiding by “06880” rules.

Pic Of The Day #1746

Windshield snowflakes, yesterday. There will be more tomorrow. (Photo/Lauri Weiser)

Roundup: Playhouse Interns, Livestreams, ADL …

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In 1946 — just 15 years after its founding — the Westport Country Playhouse established an internship program. Among its graduates: a kid named Stephen Sondheim.

Now nationally recognized as a formative experience for aspiring arts professionals, it’s named for another Westport icon: Joanne Woodward.

This summer — after a 2-year COVID hiatus — the Joanne Woodward Internship Program returns live. Internships in stage management, props/scenic painting, wardrobe, marketing, company management, education, and development will run from May 28 to August 21.

In addition to working directly with senior staff, interns participate in weekly seminars. They hear a variety of guest speakers, including Playhouse staff members, visiting designers and artists, commercial producers and more. The pay is $560 a week.

The application deadline is March 11. Click here for the form.

Stephen Sondheim (crouching, top of photo), during his 1950 internship. The photo was taken at the Jolly Fisherman restaurant. Also in the photo: future film director Frank Perry (front row, left) and Richard Rodgers’ daughter Mary (2nd row, 4th from left).

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Superintendent of Schools Thomas Scarice says:

“Given the rapid drop in COVID cases among our middle and high school students, and the small number of students in quarantine, we will return to regular classroom instruction, and discontinue the use of live-streaming cameras.

“The last day of livestreaming cameras in our secondary classrooms will be tomorrow (Friday, January 28). Pending additional cases or quarantine, there will be zero Staples High and Coleytown Middle students in isolation or quarantine after today, and only 5 students in isolation and 2 in quarantine at Bedford Middle School.

“We will continue to peel back mitigating measures prudently, based on our local experience and input from public health advisors.”

No Coleytown Middle School students in isolation or quarantine!

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ADL’s Connecticut chapter is a national leader in the fight against antisemitism and bigotry.

And — like its previous director — its new leader is a Westporter.

Stacey Sobel succeeds Steve Ginsburg. Most recently, she spent nearly a decade as executive director of Child Advocates of Connecticut, serving abused and neglected children.

As a volunteer, Sobel was president of Temple Israel, and president of Westport’s Hadassah chapter.

Sobel also was in private law practice, and served in the general counsel’s office of Continental Can Company. The Long Island native l is a graduate of Lafayette College, and Boston University School of Law.

Stacey Sobel

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TAP — the personal wellness team in downtown Westport — and Fleet Feet are partnering on the weekend of February 4-6. TAP members get 10% off merchandise at the running store.

In other words: Work out. “Run” across the street to Sconset Square. Then pick up something special for your valentine a week later.

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows a barren — but beautiful — Sherwood Island scene.

I’m betting that 48 hours from now, it will look quite different.

(Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)

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And finally … on this date in 1880 Thomas Edison received a patent for his incandescent lamp.

Honoring Annabelle

Alert “06880 reader” — and talented photographer — Jonathan Prager writes:

The setting sun draws sacred and spiritual attention. It is a lure and magnet for peace and soul celebration.

I share these photos because Tuesday was the first anniversary of the death of my mother, Annabelle Forsch Prager. She was 17 days shy of her 99th birthday.

Mom was an artistic force. As a 17-year-old girl she traveled to Provincetown to study with renowned painter Hans Hoffman, and trained at the Yale School of Art. As a freelance professional artist in New York City she illustrated books, created games and calendars, designed a version of the Domino Sugar Girl, and eventually became an award-winning author of 4 children’s books.

Her crowning achievement was creating and leading the InterSchool Orchestras of New York for the better part of 5 decades. Starting from an ensemble of 25 bewildered students in the gymnasium of a Manhattan church in 1972 (of which I was one), she shaped the ISO into a leading children’s organization that offered musical opportunity to generations of students.

At a time when budget cuts decimated music in schools throughout the nation, Annabelle served as a champion of children, music, and music for children. Her passion and determination turned the ISO into an 8-ensemble network for children ages 5 to 18.

The ISO gave gala concerts at Avery Fisher and Alice Tully Halls, and at public schools and neighborhood settlement houses. Included were the smallest kids in beginning ensembles, and virtuosic players of the ISO Symphony. All participated without any obligation to pay. Mom felt blessed to have world famous guest artists like Kurt Masur and Itzhak Perlman donate their time to guide and perform with the ISO children.

At the Westport Library each year, Annabelle did research for the ISO gala programs and musical booklets she authored. She made time to read her books to Westport’s children there, as well.

Mom was an advocate for fairness, for connection, and a veritable dynamo of nuanced, discerning, original and imaginative thinking.

She cared that the people she influenced and affected carry her legacy forward by making their own contributions.

On this anniversary, I invite each of you who knew her — as well as those who have just learned about her — to take a moment to think about and honor Annabelle in your own unique and personal way.

(Photographs/Jonathan Prager)