Roots of Stories: A Bilingual Exhibition of Oral Histories

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Manos Unidas Multicultural Educational Cooperative is announced the public unveiling of a new bilingual exhibit developed through a 2024 Mass Humanities "Expanding Stories: Advancing Equity" grant. 
 
Created in collaboration with the World and Eye Arts Center, a nonprofit based in the Pioneer Valley, this project brings to light narratives from Pittsfield residents whose voices are too often overlooked.
 
Under the leadership of Creative Directors Jean Minuchin and Anaelisa Jacobson, a community-based team conducted interviews and creative workshops to gather authentic, lived experiences from diverse members of the Pittsfield community. The resulting exhibit features recorded firsthand narrations paired with original artwork inspired by the stories, as well as talks by local experts who provide cultural, historical, and social context.
 
"The goal of this project is to honor stories that have lived in silence for far too long," said Minuchin. "By creating a platform for sharing them, we strengthen understanding and build pathways toward greater equity."
 
Jacobson added, "This bilingual exhibit reflects the richness, resilience, and depth of our community. We hope it invites dialogue and sparks meaningful connection."
 
The "Expanding Stories: Advancing Equity" initiative supports public humanities projects that amplify under-heard voices across Massachusetts. Through this exhibit, Manos Unidas and World and Eye aim to foster community engagement, reflection, and appreciation for the diverse experiences that shape Pittsfield.
 
Sunday, Dec. 14  3pm-6pm - We organize therefore we belong: Immigrants and the Soul of Democracy
 
Fernando Leon, American Civil Liberties Union
 
Fernando Leon called the Berkshires home since 2000 and is originally from Ecuador. He is interested in exploring art and organizing as a collaborative experience and a tool for transformation. He firmly believes in the value of diversity and the benefits of an inclusive society.
 
Through BASIC and Berkshire Interfaith Organizing (BIO), he has led campaigns on educational access, transportation, and language justice that helped secure policy changes in Pittsfield Public Schools—expanding multilingual enrollment support and staffing, including an Immigrant Family Liaison, a new English Learner Services Coordinator, a Wraparound Services Coordinator, additional ESL positions, multilingual phone lines and interpreter roles.
 
Fernando also collaborates with the ACLU and community organizations to reduce bureaucratic barriers at the RMV and to expand multilingual resources so immigrants can obtain driver’s licenses. He co-administers the "They Are Taking Our Neighbors" fund—made possible by the nonprofits Roots & Dreams and Mustard Seeds and Greylock Together—which connects ICE detainees from the Berkshires with legal representation for bond hearings and asylum claims. Most recently, this work has helped 35 families secure new immigration counsel after an immigration lawyer with a suspended license and unethical practices had been preying on them.
 
Saturday, Dec. 20 3pm-6pm - The journey of art and healing
 
Marina Dominguez and Dina Gregory
 
Bio - Marina Dominguez,
 
Marina Domínguez is an Argentine artist and community leader from Buenos Aires, where she studied Labor Relations at the University of Buenos Aires. For many years, she worked in multinational companies, dedicating her career to advancing social and labor rights.
 
By choice, she made the Berkshires her new home, a place where she not only migrated, but where she also rediscovered herself as a dancer, musician, life coach, painter, and photographer.
 
Her work merges dance, painting, music, psychology, and photography with her background in social sciences. Through this interdisciplinary lens and her lived experience as an immigrant, she seeks to highlight the power, potential, and creativity that young immigrant artists bring to their communities. Her artistic practice asks: What can immigrants build in a land full of opportunities? What can they create in a place like the Berkshires?
 
Marina is currently a photographer and an art facilitator, and she is the founder of Katunemo, a collective that supports immigrant and emerging local artists. She also serves as a MassDevelopment fellow, helping Spanish-speaking business owners access resources, grow their ventures, and build economic resilience.
 
Across all her roles, Marina uses photography as a tool to empower, uplift, and honor people’s abilities, stories, and cultural identities.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

BRPC Exec Search Panel Picks Brennan

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Executive Director Search Committee voted Wednesday to move both finalists to the full Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, with a recommendation that Laura Brennan was the preferred candidate. 

Brennan, BRPC's assistant director, and Jason Zogg were interviewed by the committee on Saturday.

Brennan is also the economic development program manager for the BRPC. She has been in the role since July 2023 but has been with BRPC since 2017, first serving as the senior planner of economic development. 

She earned her bachelor's degree from Franklin & Marshall College in Pennsylvania and earned a graduate-level certificate in local government leadership and management from Suffolk University.

Zogg is vice president of place and transportation for Tysons Community Alliance, a nonprofit that is committed to transforming Tysons, Va., into a more attractive urban center. 

He previously was the director of planning, design, and construction at Georgetown Heritage in Virginia, where he directed the reimagining of Georgetown's C&O Canal National Historic Park.

They each had 45 minutes to answer a series of questions on Saturday, and the search committee said they were both great candidates. Meeting virtually on Wednesday, the members discussed which they preferred.

"In my own personal opinion, I think both candidates could do the job and actually had different skills. But I do favor Laura, because she can hit the ground running and with the time we have now, I think she is very familiar with the organization and its strengths and weaknesses and where we go from here," said Malcolm Fick.

"I would concur with Malcolm, especially because she was the only candidate who could speak directly to what's currently going on in the Berkshires, and really had a handle on every aspect of what BRPC does, could use examples, and showed that she actually understood the demographic information when that information was clearly available on the BRPC website, and through other means, and she was the only candidate who was able to integrate our regional data, our regional demographics, into her answers, and so I find her more highly qualified," said Marybeth Mitts.

Brennan was able to discus the comprehensive regional strategy the BRPC has worked on for Berkshire County and said she made sure they included voices from all over the region instead of what she referred to as the "usual suspects."

"That was an enormous priority of ours to make sure that the outreach that we did and the input that we gathered was not from only the usual suspects, but community groups that were emerging in a lot of different corners of the region and with a lot of different missions of their own, and try to encompass and embrace as many voices as we could in that," Brennan said in her interview.

Member Sheila Irvin said she liked Brennan’s knowledge of Berkshires Tomorrow Inc.

"I think that her knowledge of the BTI, for example, was important, because that's going to play a role in the questioning that we did on funding. And she had some interesting insights, I think on how to use that," said Irvin. "And in addition, I just thought her style was important. 

"She didn't need to rush into an answer. She was willing to take a minute to think about how she wanted to move on and she did."

In her interview, Brennan was asked her plans to help expand funding opportunities since the financial structure is mainly grants and the government has recently been withdrawing some interest.

"With Berkshires Tomorrow already established, I would like to see us take a closer look at that and find ways to refine its statement of purpose, to develop a mission statement, to look at ways that that mechanism can help to diversify revenue," she said. "I think, that we have over the last several years, particularly with pandemic response efforts, had our movement to the potential of Berkshire's Tomorrow as a tool that we should be using more, and so I would like to see that be a big part of how we handle the volatility of government funding."

Member John Duval said she has excelled in her role over the years.

"Laura just rose above every other candidate through her preliminary interview and her final interview, she's been the assistant executive director for maybe a couple of years and definitely had that experience, and also being part of this BRPC, over several years, have seen what she's capable of doing, what she's accomplished, and embedded in meetings and settings where I've seen how she's responded to questions, presented information, and also had to deal with some tough customers sometimes when she came up to Adams," said Duval.

"She's done an excellent job, and then in the interviews she's just calm and thought through her answers and just rose above everyone else."

Buck Donovan said he respected all those who applied and said Zogg is a strong candidate.

"I think both and all candidates were very strong, two we ended up were extremely strong," he said.  "Jason, I liked his charisma and his way. I really could tell that there was some goals and targets and that's kind of my life."

The full commission will meet on Thursday, March 19, to vote on the replacement of retiring Executive Director Thomas Matuszko.

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