logo
LGBTQ+ advocacy group to stage 'Gay Marriage Plays' at Clifton banquet hall

LGBTQ+ advocacy group to stage 'Gay Marriage Plays' at Clifton banquet hall

Yahoo30-04-2025

CLIFTON — A performance that explores themes of love and tolerance will be staged at a reception hall here next week by an LGBTQ+ advocacy group.
The production, titled 'Standing on Ceremony: The Gay Marriage Plays,' features nine 10-minute monologues and vignettes to address same-sex unions in a brutally honest way.
Michael Stracco, the president of Pride Alliance of Passaic County, is directing the five-person cast. The show, he said, serves both as a 'celebration of progress' and a reminder that work lies ahead for defenders of gay rights. It blends humor with poignancy and real-world relevance, he said.
Public safety: Passaic County extends GPS-based program to protect residents with autism, dementia
'We felt that this was a very important script to perform now,' said Stracco, a high school teacher from Hawthorne.
The show will be on Friday, May 9, and on Saturday, May 10, at 7:30 p.m. in a 120-seat ballroom at The Mountainside Inn, at 509 Hazel St. The cost is $30 and includes dessert; there will be a cash bar.
Stracco said the 12-member alliance wanted to present the show due in large part to recent attacks on marriage equality.
In June 2015, the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples throughout the U.S. But in just the past four months, lawmakers in at least five states — Idaho, Michigan, Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota — introduced symbolic bills calling on the justices to reverse that decade-old ruling.
Story continues below Facebook post.
The upcoming show, Stracco said, is a form of peaceful activism to support for the LGBTQ+ community. 'We're honored to share these stories,' he said. 'Visibility remains a powerful tool for advocacy and empathy.'
The nonprofit alliance was established in February 2024. It is not affiliated with any government agency or political party.
The performance includes some mature content. To purchase a ticket in advance of the show, or to learn more about joining the alliance, visit its website at pridealliancepassaiccounty.org.
Philip DeVencentis is a local reporter for NorthJersey.com. For unlimited access to the most important news in your community, please subscribe or activate your digital account today.
Email: devencentis@northjersey.com
This article originally appeared on NorthJersey.com: Pride Alliance of Passaic County NJ plans show on marriage equality

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Protesters rally outside Delaney Hall for Palestinian activist from Paterson, others
Protesters rally outside Delaney Hall for Palestinian activist from Paterson, others

Yahoo

time14 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Protesters rally outside Delaney Hall for Palestinian activist from Paterson, others

Supporters of Palestinian activist and Paterson resident Leqaa Kordia joined with immigrant advocates at a solidarity rally outside Delaney Hall in Newark on June 5. On a humid morning outside the ICE detention center, the small group of protesters brought attention to Kordia's situation as well as the plight of detainees held in Delaney Hall. Kordia is currently being held at the Prairieland Detention Center in Texas. In April 2024, Kordia took part in a demonstration against Israel's military excursion into Gaza outside the gates of Columbia University in New York City. She was arrested after that demonstration, but the charges against her were dropped. However, as reported, she was the target of a Homeland Security Department investigation and was arrested by DHS in March. On the same day as the rally for her outside Delaney Hall, Kordia was scheduled to appear in the U.S. District Court for the District of Northern Texas to argue that the detention violated her rights and seek her release. Banan Abdelrahman, a campaign coordinator with the American Service Committee's New Jersey Immigrant Rights Program, read out comments in Arabic and English that she had received from Kordia on the morning of the rally to share with the protesters. 'I write with full certainty that we will all be free from this cruel justice and I believe with all my heart that I will soon meet you as a free woman,' Abdelrahman read from Kordia. Abdelrahman also said Delaney Hall is 'expanding the reach of the terror' in immigrant communities in New Jersey. She pointed out that while the rally was happening, an ambulance entering Delaney Hall was not allowed to enter for 10 minutes, which she said is 'indicative of a system that treats people as inhuman.' Ana Paola Pazmino, executive director of the immigrant rights group Resistencia En Accion, said the rally was important to the people being held inside Delaney Hall as well as their loved ones who are having a hard time getting into the facility to visit those detained. She encouraged people to come out to any protest or gathering outside Delaney Hall to get it closed. 'Make that effort to come out here, make that effort to be part of anything that can dismantle this system,' Pazmino said. Ricardo Kaulessar covers race, immigration, and culture for For unlimited access to the most important news from your local community, please subscribe or activate your digital account today. Email: kaulessar@ Twitter/X: @ricardokaul This article originally appeared on Protest for Palestinian activist outside ICE center in Newark

What's next for Edan Alexander? American freed, but trauma lingers for Hamas hostages
What's next for Edan Alexander? American freed, but trauma lingers for Hamas hostages

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

What's next for Edan Alexander? American freed, but trauma lingers for Hamas hostages

The world cheered as the last living American hostage under Hamas control was reunited with his family. In an exuberant scene caught on video after his May 12 release, Edan Alexander threw his arms around his parents and shrieked with joy when he spied his siblings. Later, he posted on Instagram wearing shades and holding a bottle of Corona. But after the initial euphoria, the journey is not always easy for freed hostages. Israeli doctors who have worked with the dozens of captives released in recent months told part of the USA TODAY Network, that many face a complex rehabilitation. It's still too early to know the full extent of the suffering that Alexander, 21, endured during his nearly 600 days in captivity in Gaza. In an interview published May 14, his father, Adi Alexander, told The New York Times that his son, an Israeli soldier, was held with a bag over his head at times and handcuffed, beaten and interrogated about his military service. Yael Alexander, Edan's mother, said at a news conference that her son was plagued by hunger, thirst and unsanitary conditions during his time in Gaza, not to mention constant anxiety about the war raging around him. With bombs and military strikes shaking the tunnels where he was kept, he feared that any moment could be his last, his mother said. Alexander, who volunteered for the Israel Defense Forces after graduating from Tenafly High School in suburban New Jersey in 2022, was guarding an outpost near Israel's southern border during Hamas' 2023 terror attack, in which 1,200 people died and 251 hostages were taken. The attack triggered a war that has also claimed 58,000 lives in Gaza, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry. Israel says about 20 hostages are still believed to be alive in Gaza, along with the remains of 37 others. Four of the dead are Americans. Roughly 147 have returned home in ceasefire deals or through rescue operations. Doctors who have treated them say freed captives have expressed relief and joy to be home – but also a difficulty resuming their old lives. Many suffer from emotional and physical scars, including anxiety, flashbacks and PTSD. Some feel survivor's guilt because there are still hostages remaining in Gaza, said Irwin Mansdorf, a clinical psychologist and senior fellow at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs. That emotional weight can complicate the rehabilitation process, because many returnees feel they can't avail themselves of their new lives while hostages are still suffering, said Mansdorf, who also served in the emergency division of the IDF Homefront Command. Some are still held captive by the horrors they experienced in the underground tunnels where they were held for months. "The hostages went through severe physical and emotional abuse, including maltreatment, lack of food or medical treatment, and physical interrogations, regardless of whether they were civilians or military," said professor Asher Ben-Arieh, dean of the School of Social Work and Social Welfare at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. "Many were subjected to sexual abuse as well." Ben-Arieh, who has met with prisoners of war, Holocaust survivors and hostages, said he's optimistic about the chances for rehabilitation for the returnees. He recalls a former POW telling him he "had a good life but always had the scars. I believe this can be true for the hostages: They can have a good life but will have to live with the scars." The time it could take to heal physically and emotionally from such an ordeal depends on a variety of factors, including a victim's resilience, their age and their experience during captivity, said Ben-Arieh, who also directed the Haruv Institute in Jerusalem, which developed protocols for reintegrating Oct. 7 hostages. Dr. Noya Shilo, head of the Returned Hostages Clinic at Sheba Medical Center in Israel, which has treated 46 released captives, said that in many cases, recovery is a lifelong journey. 'We are all mourners': NY writer's Oct. 7 book finds common ground in victims' stories That's especially true given the shock of Oct. 7, when Hamas gunmen overran villages and a music festival, shattering Israeli civilians' sense of security. "Very early on, we understood that this was like nothing else ever done before,' Shilo said. Without any precedent or medical literature to rely on, her team had to think outside of the box to create a new clinical discipline. 'Civilians had been taken hostage from their own homes and saw their world destroyed," she said. "This wasn't just going to take a few days at the hospital." Recoveries involved working with a team of experts in social work, psychology, yoga therapy, spirituality and alternative medicine, she said. "This kind of trauma affects the body and mind as well as the spirit," Shilo said. Medical experts learned that the trauma affected the mental health of everyone in the hostage's social and familial circle. "It was like their entire family was also taken hostage," she said. "We have to also treat the family members or loved ones of those captured or killed." The therapeutic community took lessons from Holocaust survivors, who were often haunted their entire lives by the atrocities they experienced. Despite the PTSD, she said, many of them 'managed to transform that into growth and led productive lives. We want to make this possibility present for the hostages.' But Holocaust survivors – many of whom declined to speak about their experience until old age – didn't have to grapple with the pressures of social media or the paparazzi. "The hostages were abducted as anonymous individuals, and now they are famous for the worst thing that happened to them and to Israel," Shilo said. "This is something that requires a lot of process." Ayelet Noam-Rosenthal, a lecturer in the psychology department of Jerusalem Multidisciplinary College and one of the writers of the Haruv guidelines for the reintegration of child hostages, noted that the "emotional recovery for many of the returning hostages is deeply tied to the remaining hostages in Gaza." "Many of those who returned found themselves at the center of the public campaign to bring the others home and, as a result, have not been able to focus on their own healing process," she said. One of the most important aspects of supporting the returning hostages is to help them regain a sense of control, Noam-Rosenthal advised. "Restoring agency is key to healing, and the role of the surrounding environment is to provide quiet support, respect boundaries and follow the returnee's lead," she said. The protocol also recommends asking the returnee's permission before giving a hug or turning on a light, and offering choices of what to eat. After Edan Alexander's release, it appeared that the Alexanders were heeding the words of the experts. They told a reporter at the Tel Aviv hospital where their son was being monitored that it was a blessing just to sit next to him and relax together. "We are chilling and trying to listen," Adi Alexander said. Yael Alexander added, "He needs time. ... We will give him whatever he needs." This article originally appeared on Hamas hostage, American Edan Alexander, released; trauma lingers

Want to try a TV game show? Need pastries? Try these new NJ venues
Want to try a TV game show? Need pastries? Try these new NJ venues

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Want to try a TV game show? Need pastries? Try these new NJ venues

The Record, the Daily Record and the New Jersey Herald want to keep you up to date on all the newest shops, restaurants and service providers moving into your towns. Below is a roundup of businesses that recently opened or are coming soon. Are you opening a business in North Jersey? Get the word out to your neighbors as soon as possible. Send us your information and photos and we will try to add them to our next new-business roundup. We're also interested in reporting business closings. Have a tip? Contact Business Reporter Daniel Munoz at munozd@ or 201-270-9870. Story continues below photo gallery Interactive retail store for Optimum, which offers internet, mobile, TV and phone services. Space where patrons can register for services, shop for mobile devices and accessories, pay their bill and receive customer assistance. WHERE: 202 Main St., Paterson WHEN: Grand opening was April 28. Hours are 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Call 888-467-8468 Television game show style venue where patrons can compete in 18 separate mini games, including Letter Roll; Ready, Bet, Go; Build It Up and Blaster Blitz. WHERE: American Dream, second floor next to the Escape Room, 1 American Dream Way, East Rutherford WHEN: Opening was the weekend of April 19 FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit Bakery offering sandwiches, salads, cakes, hot and cold coffee, focaccia, pizza, pastries and croissants. WHERE: 142 Linwood Plaza, Fort Lee WHEN: Grand opening was May 8. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Visit Daniel Munoz covers business, consumer affairs, labor and the economy for and The Record. Email: munozd@ Twitter:@danielmunoz100 and Facebook This article originally appeared on Want to try a TV game show? Need pastries? Try these new NJ spots

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store