A WALK ALONG THE WALTER BEAN TRAIL WITH BEN GORODETSKY

The rain that greeted us at the Walter Bean Trail in Kitchener did not deter actor/producer/teacher/writer Ben Gorodetsky (he/they) from enjoying our walk.  

“I feel most at home when it’s lightly raining and we’re near a body of water,” Gorodetsky said. “It feels very nourishing.”  

Gorodetsky was born in Edmonton, Alberta, just ten days after his parents immigrated from Donetsk, Ukraine. His mother was not the only pregnant member of their party—they also transported a pet spaniel who gave birth to a litter of puppies two weeks after Gorodetsky was born.  

After a stint in Saskatoon where their father trained as a vet, Gorodetsky grew up in Burnaby, British Columbia, and they developed a connection to large bodies of water and nature to tap into an unbound and energetic sense of self. That connection is one they continue to draw on in their artistic work.  

While living in the Vancouver suburbs, Gorodetsky’s parents enrolled him in a Russian youth theatre to preserve his mother tongue.   

“That was very important to them, cultural…linguistic preservation,” Gorodetsky said. “This theatre [became] a slippery slope…not just to multilinguality but also to a career in the arts.”  

The arts were ever-present in Gorodetsky’s upbringing. In addition to language preservation, their parents provided access to art both inside and outside the home.  

“They took us to see shitloads of theatre and shitloads of music,” Gorodetsky said. “They organized…Soviet alternative folk music festivals all through my childhood. [My dad] was not doing it for the career, was losing money on it every single time, but was doing it because it made life worth living.”  

Our path on the trail took us past the Humane Society, where the barking of dogs enjoying a romp in the rain mixed with the sounds from the Grand River to provide a soundtrack for the conversation.    

Gorodetsky left British Columbia to pursue acting training in the conservatory program at the University of Alberta. He also developed improv skills by performing regularly with Rapid Fire Theatre. After graduation, Gorodetsky began creating his own work.  

“I got really into documentary theatre, working with interviews…artifacts…documents, and making something current and vital,” Gorodetsky said. “For me…[docu-based is] just the only way that I know how to do anything, and it seems to be another pathway into the truth. [I] love oversharing, love TMI.”  

They continued their exploration of truth and art at Brooklyn College in the Performance and Interactive Media Arts Master’s program, moving to New York with their partner. After graduation, and now with a young child, a teaching opportunity brought Gorodetsky and their family back to Canada on what was to be a temporary basis, but the pandemic changed their plans.  

Gorodetsky’s sister-in-law offered her home in Waterloo, and what was meant to be a short-term solution lasted over a year and included the birth of their second child. The pandemic was a challenging time for Gorodetsky’s mental health, but the decision to make roots in this community helped them recover.  

“Without any grand foresight, but with some desire to live rather than not, I started making changes,” Gorodetsky said. “Let’s try and make a go of here…so Fall 2021 I launched Pinch Cabaret to try and meet every cool artist in town.”  

Inspired by the model of production they witnessed at home as a child; Gorodetsky began hosting the monthly variety show which platforms artists from a wide range of disciplines and backgrounds. Pinch Arts grew to include improv classes and workshops, as well as the monthly Together We’re Boisterous comedy show.  

Humour and getting a laugh is one artistic fuel for Gorodetsky. As a project for a gifted program in elementary school, they decided to take a performative approach and dance with their dog, eschewing the expectations of a more traditional report.   

From there, Gorodetsky developed a love of the absurd and the audience. He used improv to finely tune his humour and sought ways to layer in drama and catharsis to achieve a surprise tonal shift in his work.  

“I’m interested in dark humour and playful tragedy,” he said. “I think the one is boring without the other, like a chocolate chip cookie without a little bit of sea salt on top.”  

The intersection of family, art, and animals led Gorodetsky to create My Pet Ate What?, a documentary television series for CTV Wild and Crave that follows their veterinarian father as he performs endoscopy on pets to retrieve ingested items.  

Through his work performing, creating, teaching and producing, Gorodetsky has discovered that connection is key for his artistic and emotional well-being. He continues to look for opportunities to create art and foster community in Kitchener-Waterloo.  

“I thought greatness was the only goal,” they said. “I’ve learned that meaning can be derived from joy and happiness and groundedness and community, and it’s about a lateral reach. [I’ve arrived] at the greatest life; I literally never could have imagined,” Gorodetsky said.  

#Alberta #BenGorodetsky #britishColumbia #brooklynCollege #ctvWildAndCrave #documentaryTheatre #edmonton #humaneSociety #kitchenerWaterloo #myPetAteWhat #pandemic #togetherWeReBoisterous #walkInThePark

Send a letter from #PSC_CUNY demanding that #BrooklynCollege reinstate four adjuncts dismissed in an apparent ideological purge. No to the New McCarthyism. #BCFired4 #CUNY https://psc-cuny.org/issues/reinstate-the-fired-four-at-brooklyn-college/
Reinstate the Fired Four at Brooklyn College - PSC CUNY

PSC CUNY

Student Actions for Palestine Continue Across the US

 

On Wednesday May 7 demonstrators rushed through Butler Library’s security gate at Colombia University in New York at about 3:00 p.m., hanging banners, tagging shelves with graffiti, chanting pro-Palestine slogans, and renaming it the “Basel Al-Araj Popular University,” a reference to the Palestinian writer who was killed by the Israeli army in 2017.

The Columbia University Apartheid Divest (CUAD) released a statement criticizing the school’s treatment of student activists and explaining the occupation.

“Despite Columbia’s transformation of the university into a dystopian site of surveillance through its carceral expansion of cameras, wifi and ID tracking, externally contracted security, disciplinary processes, and arresting power for Public Safety officers, it still failed to quell the student movement,” it reads. “The Students outsmarted the university, exposing the cracks in their broken system. In the spirit of our martyr Basel al-Araj, the Popular University will educate our comrades towards revolutionary consciousness—taking back our university to practice a liberated, demilitarized education. Students know that resisting genocide is their moral imperative, and history is on their side.”

Students at Brooklyn College in Brooklyn, New York launched a demonstration at their campus the same day.

Students at Johns Hopkins University launched an encampment on the same night as the Columbia occupation, but say they shut it down after police “caused multiple injuries” on campus.

Earlier this week, University of Washington (UW) protestors occupied a campus engineering building on May 5. The Students United for Palestinian Equality and Return (SUPER) organized the action to demand that the school sever its ties to Boeing over the company’s connections to Israel. The group demanded the university cut ties with Boeing due to the company’s military contracts with Israel.

“WE DEMAND: UW will no longer be complicit in genocide. WE DEMAND: that our tuition money and our research not be used to fund and fuel genocide,” read a statement from the group. “Students have occupied the Interdisciplinary Engineering Building and declared that this building, renamed the Shaban al-Dalou Building will not be used to fund genocide, but to meet the needs of students and community.”

In a clear show of their intent, the new Interdisciplinary Engineering Building, which was funded in part by Boeing, sustained $1 million in damages.

Also on May 5th, seven students from California State University, Long Beach, launched a hunger strike as part of an organized protest across four CSU campuses: San Francisco, Sacramento, and San Jose State. In total, twenty-five students are striking for Gaza. They join a wave of nationwide protests demanding an immediate end to the United States’ arming and facilitating a genocide in Gaza by Israel.

The seven strikers announced on the campus their commitment to refuse food until their institution divests from companies that supply weapons, military equipment, and surveillance technology, among other demands, to Israel’s military. In addition, they call on their campus administration to pressure other CSU presidents and the Board of Trustees to do the same.

“This is part of a larger student movement to ensure that California State Students’ tuition, and Universities’ investments, are not complicit in the genocide of the Palestinian people,” read the statement by the Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) at CSULB.

Similar hunger strikes and encampments have spread to campuses in the Los Angeles area. Thirty miles north in Eagle Rock, ten Occidental College students began their hunger strike protest in April. Like the students in Long Beach, their demands included protecting students from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and providing a Sanctuary Campus for non-citizen students.

 

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/?p=19022

#BrooklynCollege #columbiaUniversity #CSU #gaza #JohnHopkins #palestine #studentProtests

Opinion | Why Brooklyn College Canceled the Jewish Currents Conference

An event for the magazine Jewish Currents took a surprising turn.

The New York Times
NYC Students Protest for Gaza: SCREW the Pro-Israel School Donors

YouTube

#Vernikov turned herself in after images circulated online of her w/a #gun tucked into her waistband while at the #BrooklynCollege demonstration.

Vernikov filmed herself in front of the protest that was supporting the #Palestinian people, saying she was part of a dueling pro-#Israel demonstration to “support the Jewish students that are in school.”

But one of the Brooklyn College rallygoers… believed Vernikov… was trying to #intimidate Palestinian supporters by having a gun at the event.

NYC #GOP councilwoman arrested for bringing #gun to pro-#Palestinian rally

#NewYork Democrats & critics are calling on a #Republican city councilwoman to resign after she was #arrested for carrying a #handgun at a pro-Palestinian rally on a #BrooklynCollege campus this week.

Inna #Vernikov, 39, who is Jewish & represents southern #Brooklyn, surrendered to police early Fri & was charged w/ #criminal possession of a #firearm.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/10/14/israel-nyc-councilwoman-gop-vernikov-gun/

NYC GOP councilwoman arrested for bringing gun to pro-Palestinian rally

Inna Vernikov’s arrest comes as the week-long war between Israel and Hamas ignites passions across the United States.

The Washington Post
What’s in a name? Lots - PSC CUNY

CUNY boasts 25 schools spread across the five boroughs. Most are named for location (Brooklyn College, Queens College, etc.) Ten schools bear the names of individuals, and the names we give our institutions reflect who holds power and shed light on who we think we are. CUNY schools named for individuals can be divided into […]

PSC CUNY

The word from my PSC-CUNY Union this morning is that an arbitrator is suggesting NYC force retirees off of Senior Care and into privately administered Medicare Advantage program that is worse.

So, I found my local council member

https://council.nyc.gov/map-widget/

And, I emailed her the PSC-CUNY plan to address the issue:

https://psc-cuny.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/PSConRHBT.pdf

And Council Member Gale Brewer's plan too.

http://council.nyc.gov/gale-brewer/wp-content/uploads/sites/90/2022/12/2022-12-19-Retiree-Insurance-Statement.pdf

#unionStrong #CUNY #NYC #BrooklynCollege #PSCCUNY

Map Widget

Together, we make the laws governing New York City

New York City Council

rain pounded the air conditioners so hard I couldn't hear my student's menschenlaut. In particular: The student presenting on Derrida, Animals, and muteness, w/ an eye towards Achebe and Ngugi on European languages (great little talk!). I pointed to the rain: that's the oppressor!

We had to decamp to an empty classroom in the lee of the storm

#BrooklynCollege