36 THE QUEENS COURIER • HEALTH • JUNE 18, 2020 FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
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 500 Port Washington Blvd., Port Washington 
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 Abraham Glasman, MD 
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 Activism Across Generations 
 In the last few weeks, we have seen  
 thousands of Black Lives Matter activists  
 use their voice through demonstrations,  
 signing petitions, and reaching out to  
 local elected officials to call for change  
 in their communities and across the  
 country. This movement stirs memories  
 for us older New Yorkers.  
 New York City has a long history of  
 activism that helped ignite important  
 movements  in  the  1960s  and 1970s  
 – civil rights, women’s rights, status  
 of Puerto Rico, anti-war,  and LGBT  
 liberation – all of which led to important  
 changes in our country. We would not  
 be the City we are today without that  
 generation of activists, who are now our  
 older New Yorkers.  
 As a new generation of activists step  
 in, older New Yorkers who have been  
 demanding change for decades serve as  
 leading examples for others to follow.  
 Many  current  laws  and  regulations  
 that protect against discrimination and  
 promote equality can be credited to the  
 efforts of our elders.  
 Every June we celebrate Pride Month,  
 a month in which we commemorate the  
 contributions of the LGBT community  
 and the LGBT rights movement that  
 began with the Stonewall Inn uprising  
 of 1969. It was an event that helped build  
 the momentum for LGBT rights, which  
 continue today for young and older New  
 Yorkers. Organizations like SAGE USA’s  
 New York chapter and the Queens Center  
 for Gay Seniors, which are part of the New  
 York City Department for the Aging’s  
 (DFTA) network of congregate centers,  
 offer services designed to support older  
 LGBT New Yorkers. In these centers,  
 many older New Yorkers continue to be  
 agents of change and advocate for LGBT  
 older adults.  
 The same is true of older New Yorkers  
 throughout the five boroughs who are  
 active within their own neighborhoods  
 by being members of their community  
 boards, volunteering for local nonprofits  
 and being active members in their senior  
 centers – many which continue to offer  
 services virtually over video conferencing  
 or phone due to COVID-19.   
 And of course, we have older New  
 Yorkers who are advocates for older adults  
 and against ageism, like the Gray Panthers.  
 Taking  their  name  from  the  Black  
 Panthers, this organization advocates  
 for equality for all people, regardless of  
 age, and believe that both the old and the  
 young have much to contribute to make  
 our society more just and humane.  
 It  is  often  said  that  youth  are  the  
 catalysts of change. And they are, just  
 as we were when we were young. But  
 activism  is  something  that must  be  
 continued throughout an individual’s  
 lifetime, regardless of age. Today’s youth  
 are calling for change and reforms that are  
 necessary for our city and our country.  
 Albany lawmakers have listened and  
 recently signed a bill package of criminal  
 justice and police reform bills. But there is  
 still more work to be done. We must also  
 not lose sight of fighting against ageism. 
 As we continue giving attention to the  
 activists and movements that will bring  
 about change, it’s important that we,  
 older generations and older New Yorkers,  
 utilize our experience and knowledge  
 to support our youth and ask for their  
 support against ageism.  
 From left to right: A civil rights demonstration in Central Park in the 1960s,  
 photo by Richard Henry. A demonstration in Harlem earlier this month. 
 NYC Department for the  
 Aging Commissioner  
 Lorraine Cortés-Vázquez 
 
				
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