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.

Berkshire DA Releases Victim's Name in Fatal Police Shooting

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

An image Biagio Kauvil posted to his Instagram page in happier days. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Biagio Kauvil's family had attempted to secure mental health resources for him before a well-being check on Wednesday that turned deadly. 

On Friday, District Attorney Timothy Shugrue identified Kauvil, 27, as the man who was killed by police in a shooting incident at 53 Off South St. on Jan. 7. The New York resident, he said, was expressing "paranoid delusional" thoughts on social media, and in calls to the FBI's National Threat Operation Center and local 911 leading up to the incident. 

"This is a horrific scene, and there is a deceased person, and it's a very sad situation. It was a mental health situation," Shugrue said during a press conference at his office around noon, right after he had spoken to Kauvil's family. 

The DA elaborated on details provided the prior day, though there are still many questions unanswered, and the investigation remains active. He declined to respond to queries about the officers' decision to breach the bedroom door the man was sequestered behind, details about the approximately 46-second struggle that resulted in Kauvil being shot in the head, or if an officer would be charged for the fatality. 

Police say Hinsdale Sgt. Dominick Crupi was shot in the hand by Kauvil, the bullet going through and striking Police Chief Shawn Boyne in his bulletproof vest. Crupi was also shot in the elbow by another officer. He was released from Albany, N.Y., Medical Center on Friday. 

Shugrue said his office will not be releasing the names of the officers involved, although he acknowledged that they have been named on social media and elsewhere. He is "not even near" ready to say if an officer will be charged. 

"I'm only here today because there's a lot of rumors going around the community. I wanted to straighten that out," he said, clarifying that Kauvil was not wanted by the FBI. 

"… I'm sorry I can't give you more information than that, but I really want to be clear about what we know at this stage. But again, this may change once we — I haven't seen the ballistics, I haven't seen the autopsy report. There's a lot of stuff I don't have yet, but I just felt the public deserved to know as quickly as possible what transpired, especially in light of what's happening nationally." 

This is the third police shooting in Berkshire County in nearly four years that involved someone in mental distress. Miguel Estrella, 22, was shot and killed on March 25, 2022, at the intersection of Woodbine Avenue and Onota Street in Pittsfield; Phillip Henault, 64, was shot and killed at his Hancock home on Sept. 9, 2023.

In both cases, investigators cleared the officers as both men had advanced on police armed with knives and threatening them.

Based on the investigation so far, there were no mental health co-responders on site. Shugrue doesn't believe the officers knew Kauvil was armed, and cited the lack of mental health resources in the community. 

"I hope one thing that comes out of this is that we can talk more about legislative work that needs to be done. We can talk about resources that need to be given to mandate that we have mental health professionals working with police officers and working with individuals that are on the street that haven't been able to get the services that they need," he said. 

"And this is unfortunate. I know, speaking to the family, they tried to get services for him. Unfortunately, there's not a lot available, and there's not a lot available in the Berkshires." 

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