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Arts Council of Greater New Haven Blog

Arts Paper

As the editorially independent arm of The Arts Council of Greater New Haven, the Arts Paper seeks to celebrate, explore, and investigate the fine, visual, performing and culinary arts in and around New Haven.

Kapp Singer

Blog Feature

Song and Dance at World Refugee Day

Olichka sings. Photos Kapp Singer. Sporting a long yellow dress, Olichka brought a microphone to her lips and began singing “Ukrayina – tse ty” (“Ukraine is you”), an upbeat pop anthem by Ukrainian artist Tina Karol. In the audience, dozens of hands started clapping alone. Then, one by one, members got to their feet. In the blink of an eye, a full-on dance party had broken out. “I know you don’t understand Ukrainian, but just feel it,” Olichka told the audience. On Saturday, a group of roughly 50 people gathered at United Church on the Green to celebrate World Refugee Day, coming together a week after several similar celebrations on the Green. Residents of the city old and new—from Syria to Sudan and Ukraine to Kenya—came together to share music, food, crafts, and stories. The event was co-sponsored by Havenly, New International Hope, Integrated Refugee and Immigrant Services (IRIS), Refugee Congress, and Elena’s Light. The United Nations’ official World Refugee Day was on June 20—due to scheduling conflicts, Saturday’s event was held a week later. 25 years ago, Olichka—whose off-stage name is Olga Borsh—moved from Odesa, Ukraine to Connecticut. She currently lives in Marlborough and works as a financial advisor. When Russia attacked Ukraine in February, 2022, initiating the ongoing war, she decided to start performing Ukrainian songs around the state to raise money for medical supplies in her home country. “It is my duty to use the talent that God gave me to help my people,” she told the audience in between songs. But beyond spreading her own heritage, Olichka asked the others in the room to spread theirs. “People love to hear your culture,” she said. Kallou Gindeel, a Sudanese immigrant, took the stage to speak about the civil war and famine in his home country and share a dance to a Nubian song. As he moved to the swirling sounds of the oud and tip-tapping of the tabla, the audience got right back on its feet to join him. Once again, the room burst into movement. Next, Brian Jarawa Gray got the audience bobbing their heads with his djembe drum performance. “This is a rhythm from the heart,” he said. Brian Jerawa Gray. Gray, who is from New Haven, said that he wanted to play the djembe to honor his ancestors’ West African heritage—but he also wanted to show the cultural reach of the instrument. He said that on his travels to Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Brazil, he heard all sorts of different djembe rhythms and techniques. “I left to check on something, and when I came back a lot of the room was up and dancing,” said Rebekah Sookdeo, PR coordinator at Elena’s Light and the emcee of the event. “That was not on the program,” she said. “It was full-on, intense-energy dancing.” A spontaneous dance party. As audience members settled back into their seats, Mohamd Shoaid offered a serene and mournful counterpart to the joyous dances. Shoaid sung a poem in Dari, the most widely spoken language in Afghanistan, wishing for war to end. He closed his eyes as he sang. His clear voice echoed, bringing a reflective quiet over the room. Nour al Zouabi, a medical researcher and recent graduate of the University of Connecticut who fled Syria due to the civil war in 2012, also asked the audience to embrace a sense of optimism. “Despite the darkness, I’m still hopeful,” she said. “I believe in our solidarity.” Nour al Zouabi. On Saturday, participants got a glimpse of that solidarity as they danced and ate together. “When I see people here, I get more hope,” said Fereshteh Ganjavi, the founder of Elena’s Light. The organization serves refugee women and children through advocacy and direct services. They provide English as a second language (ESL) tutoring, health literacy classes, and ‘know your rights’ workshops. The organization started in 2018, serving three women. Today, it serves over 100. “Depression is hard, being alone is hard, not having hope is hard for refugees and immigrants,” said Ganjavi, who came to Connecticut in 2011 from Herat, Afghanistan. “Cultural events like this make them alive again and tell them ‘you can build your community again.”

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Blog Feature

Sherry Pocknett Brings Mashpee Wampanoag Flavors To Arts & Ideas

Esther Chiang (right), Melanie Barocas Mayer, and Sherry Pocknett (left) make corn cakes. Photos Kapp Singer. Esther Chiang added a few cups of cornmeal, some baking soda, and a touch of salt and pepper to a bowl. She slowly poured in water until the mixture was the consistency of thick pancake batter. After stirring in a few scallions and cranberries, she scooped it into a hot pan. “I want to cook, I want to eat, and I want to hear the stories,” said Chiang, the food justice education coordinator at Common Ground High School. As she made corn cakes alongside two other volunteers, Chef Sherry Pocknett looked on, giving them tips—a little more water, a little hotter pan, “too much oil!” On Tuesday, the two came together at an Indigenous cooking workshop and dinner with Pocknett, a member of the Mashpee Wampanoag tribe and the first Indigenous woman to receive a James Beard award. Held at Gateway Community College’s Cafe Vincenzo as part of the International Festival of Arts & Ideas, the event brought in roughly fifty people. Diners enjoyed samples of venison skewers, salmon bites, and turkey meatballs. As they ate “Indian tacos” with fry bread and beef, blueberry fritters, and quahog fritters, Pocknett told stories about Indigenous cuisines of the Northeast and her own journey to becoming a chef. Diners line up to try the food. Her first food memory came on a trip she took with her father when she was eight, to Washburn Island off the southern end of Cape Cod. Her father dropped her and her siblings off on the island, gave them some matches and fishing line, and told them to fend for themselves. She remembers picking blueberries and digging for clams, quahogs, and mussels. “There was an abundance of food,” she said. “I learned well, and I try to teach my children the same.” Back at home, after receiving a Suzy Homemaker oven, she began cooking. She remembers stealing all the food out of the fridge at home and making a meal for her brothers. “I knew then I was going to be a chef,” she said with a laugh. As she grew up, she learned to cook at The Flume, her family’s restaurant on Cape Cod. Her uncle was the chef and her grandmother the baker. She eventually became the food and beverage director at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center in Ledyard, Connecticut. There, she transformed a menu of hotdogs and grilled cheese into one with dishes like turtle soup, venison, and smoked fish. In 2023, she received the prize for best chef in the Northeast category for her Charlestown, Rhode Island restaurant Sly Fox Den Too. The restaurant, which she opened in 2021, was meant to be a simple stepping stone for a larger farm-to-table location that she is planning to open in Preston, Connecticut. But while she fundraised to open the larger restaurant, her food started turning heads. “I got nominated and I was like ‘what the heck is the James Beard Award?’” she said. Pocknett. With the restaurant she is developing in Preston, she hopes to bring new life to the traditional foods of the Northeast. In addition to the dining room and kitchen, her plans include a cultural center and a two-and-a-half acre farm, which she’s already begun planting with raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, and sassafras. “I’m hoping to bring the beach plums back,” Pocknett added. “I don’t notice so many on the Cape anymore.” Pocknett recounted that, since she grew up on Cape Cod, she’s seen the toll that environmental degradation takes on Indigenous food systems and traditions. The ponds she swam in as a child have since been contaminated by the area’s septic systems and fertilizer runoff from lawns and golf courses. Combined with warmer water temperatures, frequent blooms of toxic algae make swimming dangerous. “My grandkids can’t swim in that lake anymore,” she added. “It just makes me so sad what’s happening with the water.” Not only does the algae cause the pond to be unswimmable, but it also kills fish, frogs, and other animals and plants, disrupting traditional Mashpee Wampanoag foodways. “Instead of making that grass green, just plant some food. That grass is poison,” Pocknett said. Despite this, Pocknett’s visit to Arts & Ideas was one of hope. Just a week before coming to New Haven, she found out that she was cancer-free after a years-long battle with the disease. She is finishing her chemotherapy treatment next week, just as she turns 64. “I’m gonna live to see my new restaurant open,” Pocknett said, as tears welled up in her eyes. That hope found its way into the food on Tuesday. Diners scraped their plates clean and fresh corn cakes were passed around. “My mom always says you have to put love into your cooking,” said her daughter and business partner Cheyenne Galvin-Pocknett. “That energy goes into your food.”

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Blog Feature

Water They Doing In There?

The Whitney Water Treatment Facility. Photos Kapp Singer.

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Blog Feature

Baldwin Set to Music at Arts & Ideas

The Kevin Harris Project performs at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

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Blog Feature

At Fair Haven Library, a Troupe of Amateur Archivists

Jennifer Coggins teaches a workshop on “Preserving Your History: Getting Started with Your Own Archives" at NHFPL's Fair Haven Branch.

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Blog Feature

New Haven Academy Honors Every Graduate

Taylor Emma Brunson cheers as she receives her diploma at the New Haven Academy graduation. Photos Kapp Singer.

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Blog Feature

After Four Years, New Haven Unveils Its Columbus Replacement

Marc-Anthony Massaro (front) and Mike Luzzi (back) reveal Indicando la Via al Futuro (Pointing the Way to the Future). Photos Kapp Singer.

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Blog Feature

Adult Ed Students Cross the Finish Line

New Haven Adult & Continuing Education Center's graduation. Photos Kapp Singer. Wearing a royal blue robe and matching graduation cap, Miguel Loor grasped the microphone and launched into the national anthem. The audience stood, hands on their hearts. As he sang the final few bars of the song, Loor embellished on the classic melody, drawing impressed whoops from the crowd. The anthem kicked off the 2024 graduation ceremony of the New Haven Adult & Continuing Education Center (NHAEC), held Thursday morning in the auditorium of the John Lyman Center for the Performing Arts at Southern Connecticut State University (SCSU). Loor was one of the 145 students graduating from NHAEC. “Honestly, it was so much better than expected,” said Loor, who received his High School Credit (HSC) diploma through NHAEC. “Usually when you come into places like this, it feels like you’re giving up on regular school and you’re lowering your standards, but it’s not like that at all. You go in there and the teachers treat you like human beings, like actual adults.” Miguel Loor and his mother, Maria Clark. Loor and his mother moved to New Haven seven years ago from Madrid, and Loor enrolled in Betsy Ross Arts Magnet School. He initially focused on visual art, but after one teacher told him he had potential as a singer, began pursuing music. In 2020, after starting high school at the Sound School, he released his first EP, Wolfcat. Loor’s music gained a small online following and he began performing at venues in the greater New Haven area, including the State House and Space Ballroom. To focus on his art, Loor ended up taking time off school. “One of the big reasons why I ended up coming [to NHAEC] was that my music stuff got serious,” Loor said. Going forward, he said he hopes to continue his musical career, but he wanted to finish his senior year of high school first. “I came into this country for a reason, my mom brought me here for a reason,” he said. “The least I could do was get a diploma for her.” On Thursday, Loor not only performed the national anthem to open the ceremony, but with other members of Tony Maron’s instrumental music class at NHAEC, he played guitar and led a singalong of the Black Eyed Peas’s “I’ve Got a Feeling.” Dion Joefield processes into the ceremony. This year’s graduating class included students between 17 to 60 years old. They participated across NAEHC’s numerous programs, including the High School Credit Diploma, General Educational Development Program (GED), and National External Diploma Program (NEDP). Six of this year’s students, two of whom were at the graduation, passed the U.S. naturalization exam and received their U.S. citizenship. Others gained their Certified Nurse Assistant certification, granted by NAEHC in partnership with Northeast Medical Institute. “Today we gather to acknowledge the transformative power of education at any stage of life,” said Michelle Bonora, the principal of NAEHC. “All our graduates come with a different story, but they have all overcome obstacles.” Michelle Bonora. For Christine Stewart Davis, the ceremony was a celebration of overcoming several of those obstacles. She began at NAEHC in 2018 after being told by Gateway Community College, one semester in, that she had to go back to high school. She enrolled at NAEHC and immediately connected with GED teachers Maureen Ryan. “She provided me with the most immense support and gave me the drive to complete my GED,” Davis said in a speech on Thursday. However, in 2019, a year after beginning classes, Davis was diagnosed with breast cancer. She dropped out to take care of her health. As she went through her treatment, the idea of school faded from her brain. Then, much to her surprise, she received a call from Ryan. Christine Stewart Davis. “She was caring, and understanding, and I heard the strength in her voice which convinced me to re-enroll back in adult education classes,” Davis said. And for Lachell Hall, it was her math teacher, Cara Mortillo, who was particularly memorable. “She was the best, kind-hearted, loving teacher,” Hall said. Hall, who was in and out of school since the early 2000s, decided to enroll in NAEHC two years ago. She is not quite sure what life will hold for her moving forward, but for now she wants to take some time to relax and celebrate her accomplishment. “I’m just excited right now that I finally received my diploma at the age of 42,” she said.

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Blog Feature

Gateway Students to Bring Art Across the Street

Marisabel Sanchez sanding. Photos Kapp Singer.

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Blog Feature

Banned Books Spotlighted at the Institute Library

De-circulated: An Interpretation of Banned Books at the Institute Library. Photos Kapp Singer.

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