OP-ED 
 Cuomo deserves praise for Mother Cabrini support 
 BY CHAZZ PALMINTERI 
 The people of New York spoke loud and clear:  
 when  the  city  asked  them  which  women  
 should be honored  in perpetuity with a government  
 sanctioned  statue,  the  overwhelming  
 favorite was Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini. 
 For  reasons  that  are  apparently  too  classified  
 for City Hall to divulge, Mayor Bill De Blasio’s administration  
 ignored  the  results  of  the  poll  they  
 commissioned in an about-face that can only be described  
 as extremely insulting to the patron saint  
 of immigration and the millions of Italian Americans  
 and Catholics who revere her. 
 However it’s a testament to her everlasting influence  
 and legacy that Governor Cuomo has proudly  
 volunteered  to  assemble  a  State  Commission  to  
 work with the Columbus Citizens Foundation and  
 the Diocese of Brooklyn to build a Mother Cabrini  
 Statue in New York City as quickly as possible. 
 Of the city’s 150 statues, only five of them are of  
 women. This is certainly a travesty that needs to be  
 corrected, and the people of New York were right to  
 overwhelmingly select Mother Cabrini as the first  
 to be immortalized. 
 She is the embodiment of New York values and a  
 unifying symbol. She founded some 70 schools, hospitals  
 and  orphanages  dedicated  to  caring  for  the  
 city’s poor, sick and unwanted. Today, New York’s  
 700,000  Italian-Americans  —  and  any  immigrant  
 who has sought refuge in this great city — owe her  
 a debt of gratitude. 
 I’m  still  scratching  my  head  over  First  Lady  
 Charlene  McCray’s  decision  to  spearhead  an  initiative  
 to involve the public in the decision, only to  
 disrespectfully  cast  aside  their  votes  to  honor  an  
 icon who aided the huddled masses of poor and vulnerable  
 immigrants on their journey through Ellis  
 Island to American citizenship. It’s a clear implicit  
 bias. 
 However, I agree with Governor Cuomo when he  
 says  it’s more  important  to  correct  this  injustice  
 than  to  dwell  on  this  slight  to  one  of New  York’s  
 most important immigrant groups. 
 Few  ethnic  groups  have  immigrated  in  bigger  
 numbers to this city to escape oppression and poverty  
 than Italians. And I applaud Governor Cuomo  
 for  standing  up  for  our  shared  heritage,  and  the  
 heritage of New York’s massive Italian-American  
 community. 
 The Statue of Liberty  is  the  first  thing our ancestors  
 saw when  coming  to  America,  and  now  a  
 monument to Mother Cabrini will grace the shores  
 of  Manhattan  in  the  shadow  of  Lady  Liberty,  
 and  remind  future  generations  of  this  country’s  
 promise. 
 Mother  Cabrini  represents  the  core  values  of  
 this great  city  of  immigrants — and New Yorkers  
 overwhelmingly  selected  her  as  their  top  choice  
 to  be  honored.  The  city  ignored  their  wishes  but  
 thanks to the state, a wrong has been righted and  
 soon  a  statue  of  Cabrini will  stand  as  tall  as  her  
 legacy. 
 Chazz  Palminteri  is  an  actor,  screenwriter,  producer  
 and playwright. 
 Serbian forces should be punished  
 for wartime rape atrocities 
  
 April 20, 2019 is a day that I  
 will never forget. I was speaking  
 in  Prishtina,  Kosova  at  a  
 ceremony remembering the  
 thousands of women who were  
 raped by Serbian military and  
 paramilitary forces during  
 the brutal war of 1998.  Several  
 hundred women were in attendance. 
  In the crowd, I could see  
 the unimaginable pain on their  
 faces.  
 When we speak of conflictrelated  
 sexual violence, we frequently  
 refer to data. We use  
 numbers and statistics to tell  
 a story. However, what we often  
 fail to portray is that we are  
 speaking of people. People with  
 lives that have been changed  
 forever. I have seen the misery  
 and stigma that they live with.  
 But I have also witnessed their  
 strength, courage and spirit.  
 Such a brave person is Vasfije  
 Krasniqi, who was only 16  
 years old when she was taken  
 from her family and raped by  
 Serbian forces. “We will not  
 kill  you”  they  told  her,  “because  
 you will suffer more if  
 we keep you alive.” What these  
 criminals  failed  to  realize  is  
 that Vasfije would survive and  
 become  an  incredible  person  
 who fights for justice, not only  
 for herself, but for all the victims  
 and survivors of wartime  
 sexual violence. As I stood next  
 to her that day in Prishtina, I  
 committed myself to helping  
 these  survivors  in  their  fight  
 for justice. 
 There are approximately  
 70,000 women that were raped  
 by Serbian forces in Kosovo,  
 Bosnia and Croatia during  
 the 1990s war. Astonishingly,  
 nearly 20 years later, the perpetrators  
 of these crimes remain  
 unpunished.  Although,  
 article 27 of the 1949 Fourth  
 Geneva Convention explicitly  
 prohibits wartime rape and  
 UN resolutions clearly categorize  
 rape and other forms of  
 sexual violence as war crimes,  
 international and local courts  
 and government alike have  
 failed to hold the perpetrators  
 of  these  horrible  crimes  accountable. 
   Wartime  rape  and  
 sexual violence continues to  
 be treated as a ‘normal’ consequence  
 of war. These institutions  
 continue  to  behave  
 as if these women are merely  
 a  casualty  of war. As  if  their  
 rights, suffering and lives do  
 not matter. 
 Whether you talk to women  
 activists in Bosnia, Croatia, or  
 Kosova, they will tell you the  
 same thing. The survivors of  
 these horrendous crimes feel  
 abandoned in their quest for  
 justice.  
 While I will always support  
 reconciliation between warring  
 nations, we should not aim  
 to achieve peace at the expense  
 of the victims. Peace without  
 justice is not a true peace nor is  
 it a sustainable one.  
 We must make sure that the  
 perpetrators of these crimes, in  
 Serbia and around the world, realize  
 that these women are not  
 alone. That the use of rape and  
 sexual violence as a weapon of  
 war will not be tolerated. 
 That is why on Tuesday, October  
 29 I call on all my fellow  
 New Yorkers to come and rally  
 for justice for survivors of sexual  
 violence in front of the Serbian  
 consulate general in New  
 York on 62 W. 45th Street. How  
 many times must we say Never  
 Again  before  we  finally  take  
 action? Now is the time for justice. 
  Now is the time to fight injustice. 
     
 We must be relentless in  
 our fight against all forms of  
 sexual violence, whether it be  
 in our own home, community  
 or anywhere in the world. That  
 responsibility lies with each of  
 us. If you or someone you know  
 needs assistance with escaping  
 an abusive environment,  
 please contact my office at  
 (718) 931-1721. We have staff, resources  
 and organizations that  
 are ready to help.  
 (Mark Gjonaj represents the  
 13th District in the Bronx.)  
 TIMESLEDGER,QNS.COM  OCT. 25-31, 2019 17  
 
				
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