
Monday, February 8, 2010
Mary Sansone, 93, Italian Activist
Given NY State Bar High Award
Sansone was given
the prestigious award for her decades of extraordinary devotion to civil
rights, social justice and for empowering the powerless. BUT, among her
greatest accomplishment was conducting a demographic study in 1977 that
exposed the still significant poverty in the Italian-American community,
bringing national attention to the plight of these working poor.
However it was largely ignored by
the leading Italian American Organizations, who chose to believe that ALL
Italian Americans had risen above their modest background, ignoring that
the Italians were extremely disadvantaged because they had a "work ethic",
rather than, like the Jews an "education ethic". Thus, even 30 years later
we have breast beating "Guidos", who view Education as an infirmity.
93-Year-Old Brooklyn Native Wins Haywood
Burns Award
by Brooklyn Eagle (edit@brooklyneagle.net),
MANHATTAN — Brooklyn native Mary
Sansone, 93, founder of the Congress of Italian-Americans Organizations
Inc. (CIAO) and the Community Understanding for Racial and Ethnic Equality
Inc. (CURE), was honored with the 2010 Haywood Burns Award this year at
the state bar’s annual meeting. At the New York State Bar Association’s
Annual Meeting at the Hilton New York in Manhattan, Sansone was given the
prestigious award for her decades of extraordinary devotion to civil rights
and social justice Sponsored by the Committee on Civil Rights, the award
is given annually to an individual whose contributions to New York reflect
Dean W. Haywood Burns’ commitment to the struggle for equality and justice,
while sharing Burns’ unique passion as an advocate for civil rights and
for empowering the powerless.
Among her many accomplishments, Sansone
organized the first community coalition between African-Americans, Latinos
and Italians in Brooklyn. She conducted a demographic study in 1977 that
exposed the still significant poverty in the Italian-American community,
bringing national attention to the plight of these working poor.
In 1976, she organized an effort
that successfully lobbied Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts to
review the famous 1920’s cases of Ferdinando Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo
Venzetti. The result was a March 1977 proclamation that said “the trial
and execution of Sacco and Venzetti should serve and remind all civilized
people of the constant need to guard against our susceptibility to prejudice,
our intolerance of unorthodox ideas, and failure to defend.”
“Since she began organizing strikes
in the garment industry at the age of 14, Sansone has been an effective
civil rights leader for 80 years, with her unmatched ability to inspire
others and to build bridges of tolerance among diverse groups of people,”
said Committee Chair Fernando A. Bohorquez, Jr. “She is a dynamic individual,
and we are pleased to recognize her myriad and long-lasting accomplishments
in building a more just society.”
Since 1970, Sansone has been the
executive director of CIAO, which is committed to promoting racial harmony
and strengthening human rights. Through the years, Sansone has developed
22 programs geared toward helping the poor and has assisted people with
their problems across racial and religious lines. In 1988, she founded
CURE, which is dedicated to reducing ethnic and racial tension while promoting
mutual respect and understanding among groups within the community.
A graduate of the Rand School, Sansone
is on the Advisory Board of the New York State Division of Human Rights,
the New York State Division of Women and several other organizations.
The award is given to honor the significant
contributions of the late civil rights lawyer and academic, Dean W. Haywood
Burns. From the young age of 15 until his untimely death at the age of
55 while promoting civil rights in post-apartheid South Africa, the former
head of the City University of New York School of Law was a leader in the
cause of expanding the civil rights of all people.
Previous award winners include: Dr.
Parveen Chopra; NYCLU Executive Director Donna Lieberman, and U.S. Bankruptcy
Judge Cornelius Blackshear.
http://www.brooklyneagle.com/categories/
category.php?category_id=4&id=33405
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