Thanks Jim, 

As Jews, our responsibility is to take the world that God has given us and to 
preserve it and make it better - our word for it is "Tikkun."  The other part 
of our tradition is that we are to strive to have a "good name."  As the 
Union Prayerbook - the Reform Judiasm text that Congregation Emanu-el uses in 
its 
daily worship says, in its English translation from the Kaddish, the Jewish 
prayer for mourners, that the dead, "still live on earth in the acts of 
goodness 
they performed and in the hears of those who cherish their memory." 

Among the many acts of grace and love (for those who experienced Allegra 
personally, let me add the word "tough" to love. for the occasions that we all 
experienced her lovingly direct expressions of disapproval) of this woman's all 
too short life, was her membership in the Clinton Community Garden as both a 
volunteer and a multi - term member of its Steering Committee.

Allegra had an extraordinary eye for color, balance and display in our 
volunteer beds. Allegra's idea was, " there are alot of people in this 
neighborhood 
who will never get to the Botanical Gardens, or can't afford the car fare.  In 
our front bed next to the magnolia tree, we want a three season explosion of 
color, so those nursing mothers, seniors, or people re-creating  from what 
life gives them can rest and see something nice."  Please go to the Clinton 
Community Garden website and click on "Become a Volunteer" to see what 
Allegra's 
keen eye and my back assembled from God's gift of flowers.  Clinton Community 
Garden 

On building community: 

Nurses are practical - their job is not diagnosis, although Allegra was a 
superb diagnostician, but doing the lions share of the work of healing and 
supporting the patient by marshalling the family's support through teaching. 

We had a problem in the Clinton Community Garden. 

New York City, and Hell's Kitchen in particular, has traditionally been a 
haven for new immigrants to America.  Previous waves had brought Dutch, African 
, 
English,  Irish, German, Italian, Norman French, Serbian, Croatian,Greek, 
Puerto Rican, Central American, Asians from the Caucasus to Tibet , mainland 
Americans who had chosen to live in NYC, and what I call "refugees from 
America" - 
folks who came to Manhattan to escape prejudice or worse, for the choices 
they had made for those whom they had decided to love.  We had absorbed all 
into 
our garden community. 

However we were having a problem with our latest immigrants, large families 
of folks from Yemen whose men had opened delis in our neighborhood and had 
large families of children who were flooding the garden.  The situation was 
this - 
the local playgrounds were filled with crack dealers, junkies, the lowest 
grade of street whores and the only decent public space in the neighborhood for 
kids to go was our garden.  

The Yemeni mothers were women of cover and our garden was the only open place 
in the neighborhood where their modesty was respected.  In their faces I saw 
the Jewish great-grandmothers of some of my family members who had lived in 
the old Polish-Russian Pale,  shtetl of the Jewish Ghettoes of Europe, bound by 
faith, home and a way of life that had not changed for centuries. 

Their kids, being kids, were tearing through the garden, sometimes 100 on an 
afternoon, ripping things up, peeing on plants, running into people having the 
time of their lives. There were confrontations between gardeners, kids and 
parents and it was beginning to get ugly.

After all they had signed our English and Spanish garden agreements, had been 
talked to repeatedly, and still they weren't complying. 

So Allegra decided to take another tack.  She went to an Iraqi departmental 
secretary at St. Clare's Hospital and brought him to the garden during her 
lunch hour and gave him a tour.  He was not the easiest man in the world to get 
along with (neither am I or many of us) but Allegra convinced him to translate 
our garden rules and membership agreements into Arabic.  And in a few weeks, 
when we had them to distribute to the ladies, who were illiterate, they brought 
them to their husbands and sons who explained them.  

The attitudes in the garden changed, because while kids would be kids, they 
worked to control them better and felt respected, having been given the same 
rules as everyone else, in language that they understood. 

The current garden sign on our fence, composed by Egyptian born gardener and 
former steering committee member Zaki Tewfik, is a continuation of Allegra's 
work.

Thought you might to know about this, 

Adam Honigman
Volunteer, 
 Clinton Community Garden  



> Subj: [cg] CG Volunteer - Adam Honigman 
>  Date: 1/10/04 10:00:09 PM Eastern Standard Time
>  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Sent from the Internet 
> 
> 
> 
> Friends of this listserv:
> 
> In the past, I have complained about inappropiate postings (political views 
> and
> not CG oriented) on this listserv so please bear with me here.
> 
> In the early morning hours of Dec 25th, Adam Honigman's wife, Allegra
> experienced stomach discomfort so she and Adam walked to a nearby hospital
> (only a few blocks away). She passed out prior to getting there and a taxi 
> came
> to their assistance, taking them to the hospital's emergency room.  She was
> experiencing the beginning of a major heart attack.  
> 
> A few days later, she was slowing rebounding from this traumatic experience. 
> 
> Adam, their son, Daniel, and close friends spent time visiting with her. 
> Because the attack impaired her vision, Adam read get well cards to her.
> 
> On Jan 4th, Allegra suffered another heart attack.  This created a grave
> situation so relatives and close friends were contacted.
> 
> Yesterday (Jan 9th), Allegra Benveniste Honigman passed away.  Services will 
> be
> held this coming Monday, January 12, 2004 at Congregation 
> Emanu-el, 65th Street and Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, NYC at 1:00 p.m.
> 
> As many of the ACGA listserv participants are very aware of, Adam is the 
> most
> active and helpful contributor to this forum.  His community gardening
> expertise which comes from many years of being a devoted volunteer of the
> Clinton Community Garden (NYC)is invaluable. He has shown many times over 
> and
> over his willingness to help many seeking answers in their quest to create a 
> CG
> or to improve their existing garden.  
> 
> Please take a few minutes to express your thoughts of this great loss to his
> family.  Allegra was a nurse for 30 years.  That committment alone 
> summarized
> her devotion to help others in need.
> 
> Adam's phone number is 212-541-5277. 
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Home Address:  360 West 55th Street, New York, NY 10019.
> 
> Kindest regards to all,  Jim Call, CASA CG Volunteer Dir.  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

Reply via email to