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“I was raised in a very white neighborhood”: Housing and Racial Change “I was raised in a very white neighborhood”: Housing and Racial Change
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“There I was in the heart of ethnicity!”: Identity-based Organizing “There I was in the heart of ethnicity!”: Identity-based Organizing
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“ALL of that is what feminism is to me”: Joining the Women’s Movement “ALL of that is what feminism is to me”: Joining the Women’s Movement
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Three Everything Then Made Sense: Bridging the Neighborhood and Women’s Movements
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Published:April 2015
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Abstract
This chapter explains how federally funded community organizing programs directed Williamsburg-Greenpoint residents' anger against the city government, allowing the neighborhood to evade the violent white racial backlash against the school busing that broke out in nearby Canarsie in 1972. Building on this mobilization and using War on Poverty funds, MYF social worker Jan Peterson worked closely with a group of Italian American women to open the neighborhood's first day care and senior citizens' center—Small World Day Care and the Swinging Sixties Senior Center. The two became a contentious project opposed by many male leaders in the neighborhood—one that drew women to join the National Congress of Neighborhood Women (NCNW), which Peterson founded in Brooklyn in 1974.
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