image description
Mayor Thomas Bernard and members of the Sister City Committee pose with the new signs.
image description
image description

North Adams Installs Sister City Signs Recognizing Tremosine

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

The signs were paid for out of the Sister City account.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Two signs at the southern and western entrances to the city now proudly proclaim its relationship with Sister City Tremosine sul Garda in Italy.
 
The 3-foot by 4-foot signs were installed Tuesday near the signs marking the  North Adams border — one at Hardman Industrial Park and other near Harriman & West Airport.
 
The two communities have been in the Sister City program since 2005, when the late Dr. John Moresi and Ed Morandi led the first of what would become an annual trip to scenic Northern Italy.
 
Many North Adams residents have ancestors who grew up around Lake Garda. Former councilor Marie Harpin, who went on that first trip, joked that the cemetery is full of North Adams names. 
 
She's not wrong. One of the first immigrants from Tremosine was a Rosasco; he was followed by Bonas, Cellanas, Cozzaglios, Desrosiers, Donatis, Faustinis, Franzonis, Ghidottis, Marchettis, Morandis, Moresis, Pedercinis, Remillards, Spragues, and Veraschis — just a snapshot of a lengthy list of names that can be found iin the city and around the Berkshires.
 
Moresi, who died in 2013, had been very interested in genealogy and his parents' ancestral home and frequently visited and lectured on the region.
 
"Before I start any of my talks on Italy and Italian cultures, I always like to respect and to honor our ancestors when I say that I was privileged to be born the son of Italian immigrants," he told the Historical Society back in 2000. "[I] only realized that when supposedly I became an educated man. One does not realize, until you've lived it, the courage, the innate genius that many of these people had."
 
Morandi, a member of North Adams Sister City Committee, said the signs are duplicates of those installed in Tremosine some years ago — although a bit smaller — and that one his counterparts in Italy, Laura Morandi, had provided the correct wording. 
 
The Italian signs were installed in 2007, when the James Bond film "Quantum of Solace" was filming there.
 
"These beautiful signs affirm the relationship between North Adams and Tremosine sul Garda and the rich heritage of our two communities," said Mayor Thomas Bernard, who posed with committee members and participants in the annual trips. 
 
The City Council had approved the signs at the request of Morandi earlier this year from the Sister City fund. 
 
Morandi said he wanted to thank the mayor, City Councilor Marie T. Harpin, Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau and Administrative Officer Michael Canales for making it happen. 
 
He had been among those who signed the official documents in Italy confirming the two communities were "Citta Gemellate" back in 2005 under former Mayor John Barrett III. 
 
"I've socialized with the people of Tremosine, found many second and third cousins, personally contributed gifts to the people of Tremosine, and have made hundreds of friends," he told the City Council in requesting the signs.
 
Representatives from Tremosine have visited North Adams twice and the senior Harpin recalled how they had entertained the group when their bus was delayed by giving them a tour of the public safety building.
 
"Oh my gosh, they were climbing on a fire truck and they got a ride around the city," she laughed. "I think that was a highlight of their North Adams trip."
 
Morandi said one of the gentleman from that tour still wears a gift badge and police cap he was given. He said there is an amazing outpouring of friendship whenever the North Adams group visits. 
 
The group will be heading back to Tremosine next May.

Tags: sister city,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

North Adams, Pittsfield Mark King Day With Calls for Activism

By Tammy Daniels & Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Alÿcia Bacon, community engagement officer for the Berkshire Taconic Foundation, speaks at the MLK service held Price Memorial AME Church in Pittsfield. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Wendy Penner can be found pretty much everywhere: leading local initiatives to address climate change and sustainability, championing public health approaches for substance abuse, and motivating citizens to defend their rights and the rights of others. 
 
That's all when she's not working her day job in public health, or being co-president of Congregation Beth Israel, or chairing the Williamstown COOL Committee, or volunteering on a local board. 
 
"Wendy is deeply committed to the Northern Berkshire community and to the idea of think globally, act locally," said Gabrielle Glasier, master of ceremonies for Northern Berkshire Community Coalition's annual Day of Service. 
 
Her community recognized her efforts with the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Peacemaker Award, which is presented to individuals and organizations who have substantially contributed to the Northern Berkshires. The award has been presented by the MLK Committee for 30 years, several times a year at first and at the MLK Day of Service over the past 20 years. 
 
"This event is at heart a celebration of our national and local striving to live up to the ideals of Dr. King and his committed work for racial equality, economic justice, nonviolence and anti-militarism," said Penner. "There is so much I want to say about this community that I love, about how we show up for each other, how we demonstrate community care for those who are struggling, how we support and and celebrate the natural environment that we love and how we understand how important it is that every community member feels deserves to feel valued, seen and uplifted."
 
King's legacy is in peril "as I never could have imagined," she said, noting the accumulation of vast wealth at the top while the bottom 50 percent share only 2.5 percent the country's assets. Even in "safe" Massachusetts, there are people struggling with food and housing, others afraid to leave their homes. 
 
In response, the community has risen to organize and make themselves visible and vocal through groups such as Greylock Together, supporting mutual aid networks, calling representatives, writing cards and letters, and using their privilege to protect vulnerable community members. 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories