Tag: Boston Common

  • ‘We’re everywhere’: At Brookline’s No Kings rally, crowd fills Coolidge Corner to protest Trump

    By Lauren Albano

    About three miles from the Boston Common, where over 100,000 people gathered  for the second “No Kings” protest, over 100 Brookliners of all ages filled Coolidge Corner on Saturday to do the same. 

    Organized by local activist groups Speak Out, Seniors! and Brookline PAX, the demonstration represented a microcosm of a nationwide movement which brought out nearly 7 million people to streets across the country this weekend to protest the “authoritarian” policies of President Donald Trump’s administration. 

    “We’re here to bear witness and to tell people who feel the same way we do that there are others, so they can feel some sense of solidarity,” said Deborah Finn, a Speak Out, Seniors! organizer who spearheads the group’s weekly 2 p.m. Saturday standout.

    The Brookline rally was accessible for seniors who may not feel comfortable commuting downtown or standing in large crowds, Finn said. Senior demonstrators had space to sit or use walkers as they raised signs and waved to passing cars, whose drivers honked frequently in support of their cause.

    John Bassett, 86, stood at one corner of the square playing old protest songs, such as “When Johnny Comes Marching Home,” with his trumpet. Several of his family members, including his grandson, accompanied the senior standout regular to the No Kings rally. 

    “I’ve had a good life, and I would like my grandchildren to have maybe even a better life, or at least just as good,” he said.

    Bassett participated in protests against Vietnam and nuclear weapons in the 1960s and 70s. He said he appreciated the Coolidge Corner rally being organized in tandem with both the Boston Common protest and the thousands of No Kings demonstrations nationwide.

    “It’s arguable that a lot of smaller demonstrations in a lot of different places is as good as, or maybe even better, than everybody being in one place,” he said. “This way, you can’t get away from us. We’re everywhere.”

    Finn said as an older, white woman, she is “least likely to be suspected of being a troublemaker.” Given recent federal immigration crackdowns in Boston, Finn said it’s important for people of lower-risk demographics to speak out.

    “This is a town full of immigrants,” she said. “There are people here who are vulnerable, and the people who are theoretically less vulnerable have to stand up in front.”

    Lea Hachigian, a 35 year old who works in biotech, came to Coolidge Corner with her husband and two kids for the rally. Hachigian said her kids are old enough to pay attention to the news and have begun asking questions.

    “We’ve been trying to talk about it at home a little bit, and we felt like these democracy rallies are a very positive way to get involved and focus on the good aspects of what it means to be an American,” she said.

    Lea Hachigan, right, came to the No Kings rally in Brookline with her husband and two children. Photo by Lauren Albano

    Hachigian said she has been “dismayed” by the Trump administration’s actions, but this moment serves as a reminder to appreciate the government citizens have had. 

    “Hopefully, we can do something before we destroy more and more parts of this incredible system that’s lasted hundreds of years,” she said.

    Holding a sign that read “No kings since 1776” was 87-year-old Gail Flackett , who attends the senior standout nearly every week and brought her two grandchildren to the No Kings rally. 

    She comes from a long line of activism, noting that her grandmother helped people get abortions before they were legalized. Flackett recalled traveling to Washington, D.C. in the 1990s to advocate for Planned Parenthood. 

    “My parents would be very shocked if they knew that Trump was president,” she said.

    Flackett encouraged people to think about their values and question whether they are truly being represented in the government.

    Mica, a public health researcher who wished to withhold her last name, held a sign reading, “No kings. No fascists. No hate.” She noted the impact of federal research cuts on her work.

    “We’ve lost a ton of public health federal funding for research,” she said. “Our research saves lives, and all of the cuts at the federal level are going to impact science research for decades.”

    Jeff Rudolph, 51, said he dislikes Trump’s practice of seeking “retribution” against those who challenge him politically. He said the ongoing government shutdown is a prime example of this.

    “Not being able to do any negotiation across the aisle [is] because no one trusts him,” he said. “And now we’re seeing programming cut, all kinds of people that need help aren’t able to get resources they need, and it all comes down to him.”

    Elisabeth Pendery, 70, a retired Public Schools of Brookline teacher, attended the Boston Common rally before coming to the Brookline demonstration. She said the country is in a “very dangerous, precarious time right now,” so it’s crucial for people to stand up and make their voices heard because “democracy is an action.”

    Former Public Schools of Brookline teacher Elisabeth Pendery, right, attended both the Boston Common No Kings rally and Brookline’s local event. Photo by Lauren Albano.

    “To say you’re not political is to say you don’t care about your community, and I think people have to take a little more personal responsibility about trying little things to make a difference,” she said.

    Bassett emphasized that protests are important for displaying the ideology and values of a community. He said while holding demonstrations can seem trivial, they make a difference. 

    “Each action is a drop,” he said. “Eventually, the drops spill the bucket, and those things that we did eventually help change our policies.”

  • No walls, no limits: LGBTQ+ museum plans to go statewide

    Portraits of Pride exhibition on display at Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park, 100 Atlantic Ave,, Boston. Photo by Wen Qi

    The Boston LGBTQ+ Museum of Art, History & Culture had a big idea: bring the museum to the people.

    Jean Dolin, a Haitian immigrant raised in Dorchester, got the idea for the museum in 2020 after years working in politics and journalism. The museum doesn’t have a physical space and instead brings exhibits to places around the city, from Boston Common to the Seaport District. But while it lacks a building, Dolin has grand plans for his museum: He wants to take exhibits all across Massachusetts and build a statewide presence within four years.

    “I emerged out of COVID wanting to do the thing that moves me, the thing that I feel like would inspire, would inform, but would also empower,” Dolin said.

    He began with a documentary on the LGBTQ+ community called “Rainbow Tales” but decided it wasn’t reaching enough people.

    “And then something kind of sparked,” Dolin said.

    Inspired by a photography exhibition he’d seen in the streets of Boston, he created “Portraits of Pride,” which is now in its fourth round. The exhibit features 10-foot-tall portrait banners of people who have stood out in their communities. Printed on durable fabric and suspended from custom-built frames, the portraits spotlight leaders and figures in the LGBTQ+ community.

    Above, Susu Wong’s portrait on display at Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park. Photo by Wen Qi

    “So to me, this was a way of saying thank you to all of those who fought for those decades, because I’m a beneficiary of all their work,” Dolin said.

    He held his first “Portraits of Pride” on Boston Common in 2022, and then started raising money so they could keep creating similar projects as part of a formal museum. And it was finally declared as an established institution in October 2023.

    Since that initial exhibit, the museum has held three more: on City Hall Plaza in 2023, in Sea Green in the Seaport in 2024, and the current one in the Connector/Winthrop Center Park.

    The new exhibit contains 20 portraits, photographed by John Huet, including Gretchen Van Ness, executive director of LGBTQ Senior Housing, Paul Glass and Charles Evans, founders of LGBTQ+ Elders of Color, and Jerome Smith, a Dorchester resident who is the senior manager of external affairs at Amazon and Boston’s former chief of civic engagement.

    Arline Isaacson, the board chair of the museum, was featured in the first Pride Legacy Exhibition. “It’s an important recognition of the work that our community has done over the years and especially young folks in our community,” she said.

    Their locations are crucial, Isaacson said. The museum chooses public spaces where all sorts of people walk by. The Winthrop Center faces the Connector building, which holds 4,000 people, including major employers like McKinsey & Co. and Deloitte.

    “It’s a great way to honor people,” said Aadya Gadkari, a solutions engineering analyst at Deloitte.

    On Wednesday the museum opened a new exhibit, a collaboration between the two artistically renowned cousins, Paul Firmin, a queer Haitian artist widely known as KINI, and Rejeila Firmin, the exhibition’s curator, as the artist in residence. The exhibition is at the Pryde Gallery, at 59 Harvard Ave. in Hyde Park. Inside the LGBTQ+ senior housing building, with which they have been partnering since last year.

    “I think I’m also excited that this is a Haitian queer artist that is doing it,” Dolin said. “There is a very long history of homophobia in Haiti. So that’s easy for these two identities to be held in one body. ”

    KINI is known for his lively, colorful paintings, but he decided to work in black and white for this exhibit to symbolize good and evil, and grays to represent the blurry lines in life. His goal was to blur the lines between the past, present and future.

    “Create a place where a kind of everything can exist,” KINI said, “and there’s like no objectivity really, and it’s just, that’s why I call it the void, because I feel like anything can happen in a void.”

    The exhibition will be up until mid-September, and then will be followed by another, Dolin said.

    In addition to “Portraits of Pride,” the museum commemorated 20 years of marriage equality in May 2024 at the State House and partnered with LGBTQ+ Senior Housing to create the Pryde Gallery. It also hosted the weeklong Queer Arts Festival last October and organized a National Coming Out Day celebration.

    The museum launched an artist-in-residence program with Rejeila Firmin and plans to introduce a fellowship next year. The first initiative, “Queer Youth Creative Writing & Poetry,” will recruit high school seniors and college freshmen in Greater Boston to develop their writing.

    The museum’s 2026 project is still in the works, but it plans to have a commemoration of the United States’ 250th birthday in the spring, and then travel with it through the whole state in 2027 and 2028.

    “So at that point, we’re going to be evolving the name of the institution from Boston LGBTQ to Massachusetts LGBTQ,” Dolin said, “because ultimately, we’re telling the history of the state, and we want to go and evolve into a statewide institution.”