Politics/Community Involvement

In addition to a traditional focus on the public realm of governance and power structures, this theme should also reflect a feminist understanding of “the personal as political.” We are interested in women’s opinions, values, and activities as they relate to a broad sphere of social relations.

Temperance Staples

Professor, Researcher, Coalition for a Healthy Greater Worcester

I think one of the biggest events of my life that really seriously wove me into Worcester's community was running the vaccine clinic when Covid happened.  I was working for the Coalition for a Healthy Greater Worcester where I still am and one of my very good friends from grad school was the project manager for the commissioner, Dr. Castiel.  She's our Commissioner of Health and Human Services.......I basically got "voluntold" that I was going to be running the logistics of our vaccine clinics and that was a year of getting up at like 1:00 am, driving to Worcester, picking up these vaccines at this, you know, super secret location, and then rolling out these neighborhood church driven, community driven vaccine clinics where we were going into grocery stores--all this stuff and by doing that I met everybody.

Temperance Staples was born in Wellesley, Massachusetts and currently lives in Somerville.  In this interview she describes her work with Coalition for a Healthy Greater Worcester and how it has connected her to the Worcester community, her graduate education at Clark University, her work during the Covid pandemic, and the current state of access to healthcare.

Interview Date: 
Fri, 04/05/2024
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Yaffa Fain

Deputy Cultural Manager, City of Worcester

One of our goals as a culture office, is to engage with young people as well as folks from all different generations, but youth being a really important demographic. So we're often working with the colleges. We work with Worcester Public Schools quite a bit. We have a couple youth programs, so we have Create 508, which is a youth entrepreneurship program where we teach young people about creativity. And then also the youth poet laureate who's an ambassador to poetry is a program run out of our office. So we're always trying to think, how can we engage more young people? And during college and high school, and when I was younger as well, I was really passionate about always working with young people. So that's something that I'm really excited that I get to bring to this work.

Yaffa Fain was born in Hamden Connecticut in 1995 and attended Hamden High School. Yaffa’s mother was born in Pittsburgh., PA and her father was born in Hartford, CT. She is the youngest of three children, having two older brothers. Yaffa attended Clark University in Worcester, MA from 2013-2018 and has worked in Worcester since 2017. She is currently working for the City of Worcester's culture department as the deputy cultural officer. In this interview, Yaffa discusses the significance of her position in relation to her life and how she has come into the position.

Interview Date: 
Wed, 04/03/2024
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Alise Breton

Retail Director/VP, Millbury Credit Union

Really when it comes to volunteering, if I'm asked, I usually say yes, just because I do love to give back. And I like the camaraderie that happens when you volunteer, especially with a group of other strong women. It's just great to be involved and I'm very passionate about it.

Alise Breton is a 39-year-old woman who was born and raised in Oxford, Massachusetts. She currently lives in Dudley, Massachusetts with her husband and dog. Alise works for Millbury Credit Union as a retail director who oversees four of the five branch locations. In this role, she works as a manager to the other branches and runs the social media for the company. In this interview, Alise discusses her path to becoming a career-focused, passionate woman.

Interview Date: 
Tue, 03/26/2024
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Stacey Luster

General Counsel, Worcester State University

What I think we have to work on more as women is lifting each other up…make each other highlight each other’s accomplishments and treat each other as our potential, not our shortcomings, to really build each other up.

Stacey Luster is a third generation Worcesterite. During her formative years she lived in Great Brook Valley, Plumley Village, and Washington Heights. She graduated from South High School at the age of 16. She attended St. John’s University in New York and completed her degree in Government and Administration. In addition, she graduated from Boston University School of Law. In 1991 she was elected to the Worcester City Council, the first elected black woman to serve in that capacity.

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Interview Date: 
Thu, 03/09/2023
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Leigh Anne Bianchi

Owner, The Good Citizen Project and Chris's Collections

So that was the basis for The Good Citizenship Project, which is now morphed into something entirely different, except for that it's based on the idea that, everybody, everybody, doesn't matter who you are, what your diagnosis is, what culture, ethnicity, anything, we all need meaning and purpose. Every single one of us needs a reason to get up in the morning, and for The Good Citizenship that means going and helping other people by helping out in farms and barns. So, parents with people that have autism will contact me. I will go pick them up at their house and we'll bring them to local farms and barns, and I teach them how to do all the chores. Through that, they get to interact with all the animals that are there. Sometimes it’s horses, sometimes it's llamas and peacocks, sometimes it's cows and we do all the chores and I mean all the chores, cleaning up the manure, moving the hay, fixing fences, learning how to trim the goats' hooves. And everything that goes in between that. So, they get these marketable skills that they need to be able to go out into the world and be positive contributing members of the community. And the barn owners get much needed help...So, everybody wins and I am there to make sure that if there's someone confused, they don't know what to do or maybe there's a better way to do that chore, I teach them. I teach them how to do it and I base that on my own autism and obvious signs of autism throughout the family and all the years working in the field.....I'll never be rich doing this financially, but I will always be rich in spirit. Always. Because I know that what I'm doing helps other people and I'm teaching others to be helpful and kind and involved in community. At the very basis of it just giving back and doing good where you can, and that's enough for me.

Leigh Anne Bianchi was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1974. She spent the first 11 years of her life there. She and her family then moved to Kentucky, Ohio, and finally Holden, Massachusetts.  She arrived in the Wachusett area at the age of 14. She currently resides in Paxton. She has worked as a nanny and babysitter as well as in preschools, daycares, farms, and the food service industry. As the founder and sole worker of The Good Citizenship Project and Chris’s Collections, she touches upon how she came to develop these organizations and what their core values are.

Interview Date: 
Wed, 03/08/2023
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Sanam Zaer

School Administrator; Administrator of "A Better Shrewsbury" online forum

I ran for school committee, but I didn't get on it. I ran for two years in a row. And my main motivation there was just to kind of change the conversation here in Shrewsbury. You had asked some of the challenges in Shrewsbury. One is that we have 100% white school administration, school committee leadership, in a district that's 51% non-white, which is, I mean that's a huge disparity. So, when I ran—and I think towns in general have a habit of not speaking directly about certain issues, because they want to uphold the appearance that everything is okay, everything is fine, we're an awesome school, that kind of stuff. But I think you know you can be an awesome school and also acknowledge, these are areas we need to work on and really tackle those. So, me running was just an effort to kind of encourage new people to run and push some of these different topics to the forefront of conversation.

Sanam Zaer was born in 1983 and is a mother to 2 biological children and several foster children and who lives in Shrewsbury Massachusetts. Sanam grew up in Grafton and has lived all over, spending most of her time in Central Massachusetts and California. Sanam attended University of Massachusetts Amherst where she earned her bachelor’s in journalism and English and a master’s degree in education. Her early love for spending time with children helped her to her current profession as an elementary school tutor and a school administrator.

Interview Date: 
Wed, 03/15/2023
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Valerie Zolezzi-Wyndham

Founder and CEO, Promoting Good

I was a civil rights lawyer for a really long time and our client communities were you know, majority of the global majority, right? And, and yet our staff was not representative of the communities that we served. And I do a lot of work in my organization to help management and the attorneys think about how to build better relationships with the clients that we served and did work to try to have the staff better reflect the communities that we were working with. So, I did that work informally for a long time. And then five years ago, I decided that’s what I should actually be doing. And so, I started Promoting Good on a leap of faith [laughs] thinking there was a need for organizations that want to be inclusive…or maybe don’t always want to do it. A bit of both. And so, I started a company that just does that. So, it started out with just me, and now there’s five of us. All women of color, and we are trying to help organizations do their work differently.

Valerie Zolezzi-Wyndham was born in 1983 in Mexico and came to Worcester, Massachusetts in 2002. She has always worked in Worcester County, and she currently lives in Upton, Massachusetts. After graduating from law school, Valerie was employed as a managing attorney at Community Legal Aid. She is the founder and CEO of Promoting Good, LLC, which is a consulting firm that leads transformational change processes based on diversity and equity. She has expertise in health equity and social determinants of health-focused strategies.

Interview Date: 
Thu, 03/09/2023
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Deborah Hall

Executive Director, YWCA Central Massachusetts; Founder, Worcester Black History Project

I transitioned into this role almost two years ago—two years in July—July 1st will be two years.  I always think it's important to note our mission is to eliminate racism, empowering women, and promoting peace, justice, and freedom. In our 135 year history there had never been a woman of color and now this is a black woman leading so I thought that was important for the community and for the YWCA Central Massachusetts. And so here we are.

Deborah Hall is the Executive Director of the YWCA of Central Massachusetts and the founder of the Worcester Black History Project. She has a passion to keep the mission statement of “eliminating racism and empowering women” alive. Her family origin and personal experiences has led her down a path of advocating for people who cannot advocate for themselves. Debbie focuses on domestic violence and helping people in these situations find safety. She is passionate about spreading awareness and guiding people to independence and security.

Interview Date: 
Thu, 03/09/2023
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Jennifer Freed

Writer, Writing and ESL Teacher

I think I ended up writing about that because it was a way to help me - it was like my therapy and then taking what would be possibly a messy journal entry and taming it and shaping it into a poem that would have some meaning to someone else. It's like when you're really focused on some task, then all this swirl of anxiety all around you kind of goes away because you're just focused on this one thing and then with poetry you get a poem out of it in the end. So, when I had enough of those, I realized oh I have enough for a book, and I made my first collection.

Jennifer Freed grew up in Stow, Massachusetts and received a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Yale University. After college, Jennifer taught English learning skills in the People’s Republic of China. It was there where she discovered her love of teaching which led to her teaching English as a Second Language in the United States. She is married and worked as a teacher in Boston until the oldest of her two daughters was born. Jennifer and her family moved to the Worcester area, residing in Holden, MA, when her husband got a job working at UMass Medical.

Interview Date: 
Thu, 03/09/2023
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Nancy Greenberg

Cultural Arts Director, Worcester JCC

There are JCCs all over America. In fact, we are all connected.  When I go on my email, I have a list—there are lists of people doing similar jobs to yours. And I have colleagues that I know and some I don’t actually know them sometimes, but I know them from being just connected to them. I know what my colleague in Cleveland, Ohio might be doing, and I know what my colleague in San Francisco might be doing, and I know I have a colleague in fa- well there’s no JCC there but she’s part of a reform there like a temple. Now that there’s the whole virtual thing, we have done a lot of virtual programming together. When the [Covid] pandemic started, well first of all, I thought I might lose my job because we work with people, and you couldn’t work with people! But we just kind of - everything kind of morphed on to Zoom as you know. And because I have colleagues all over the country, I was doing programs with people in Atlanta, and Florida, and Cincinnati, and just people who wanted to do like similar kinds of programming. In particular, I do an author series, a Jewish author series, and Jewish meaning the author could be Jewish, the content could be Jewish or thematically it could be Jewish, it doesn’t – or it could have a non-Jewish author but it be something like about World War II and of interest to the Jewish community. So, I plan these book things and it’s a thing, JCCs all over the country do these book things.  Once we were on doing virtual stuff, we could all sort of partner together and get a bigger audience because anyone could get on the Zoom.

Nancy Greenberg is the Cultural Arts Director of the Worcester Jewish Community Center.  In this interview she discusses past life experiences working at multiple Jewish Community Centers [JCC], traveling experiences, her children, and more. She has been a major part in the JCC community working at several of them to finally remain in Worcester. She describes the way in which the JCC has not only shaped her but her children being of Jewish descent.

Interview Date: 
Fri, 03/10/2023
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