Movement classes back in Washington Square Park 
 Naomi Goldberg Haas leads the series of exercises, including modified squats. 
 BY TEQUILA MINSKY 
 Finally, the day has arrived – it’s been  
 14 and a-half months! 
 At the mini-stage across from the  
 Garibaldi statue in Washington Square  
 Park on June 1 at 9:30 a.m., smiles radiate  
 from the cluster, ready to be guided into  
 motion by Naomi Goldberg Haas,  their  
 fearless teacher. 
 Most present are Movement Speaks™  
 regulars at Parks’ Dapolito Center, which  
 closed to classes because of the Pandemic  
 mid-March 2020. These classes, the core  
 program of Dances for a Variable Population  
 founded by Haas  promote  creative  
 movement, particularly for older adults of  
 all ages and abilities. 
 With a city on shutdown, Naomi barely  
 skipped a beat, immediately sequing her  
 classes onto Zoom – free, and fi ve days a  
 week. 
 But, under the trees, in open air, what  
 a difference! 
 In  the  park,  using  police  barriers  as  
 barres  for  balance,  dancers  fi rst  warm  
 up their muscles with a series of exercises  
 and then shift onto the plaza allowing for  
 greater movement and improvisation. 
 Some  participants  became  regulars,  
 like Gordana Rashovich, who years back  
 discovered  these  classes  when  walking  
 PHOTOS BY TEQUILA MINSKY 
 through the park. “Thank God for Naomi  
 Goldberg Haas!” says this lower Manhattan  
 resident. “She makes us feel alive. This is  
 A fitness class in progress. 
 sensational. And, it’s beautiful just to be  
 outdoors.” 
 Phyllis  Cohl,  age  84,  has  been  with  
 Naomi  since  she  taught  at NYU,  thirty  
 years ago. “I was the youngest student in  
 the class then,” she chuckles. Since a year  
 ago March, holed up in her Village apartment, 
  she religiously took the Zoom classes  
 from her home offi ce every morning. 
 In light fi ltered through the leaves on  
 this glorious spring day, she beams, “I feel  
 liberated.  I  can  see  the  scenery,  people  
 walking, and the children!” And further  
 kvelling, “I just like being outside, seeing  
 trees, dancing with others, and connecting  
 with people I haven’t seen in 14 months.” 
 Sandra Indig of the West Village also has  
 been attending these classes for decades.  
 Needing support for balance, she explains,  
 “I’m developing a way to move with a cane.” 
 When the one-hour class fi nished, dancers  
 extemporaneously opined: It’s divine,  
 inspiring, freeing, soaring, exhilarating.  
 And, without any prompting, others added:  
 I can breathe; it is gratifying; I feel joy! 
 Of  her  long-delayed  park  in-person  
 experience,  guiding  instructor  Naomi  
 Goldberg Haas says, “I feel the presence  
 and their being. It is so exciting!” And,  
 since Naomi actually began teaching her  
 classes with older adults downtown, she is  
 seeing dancers she’s known for years. With  
 immense warmth she adds, “I feel like I am  
 coming home!” 
 Since September, Naomi also has been  
 teaching outdoors at Grants Tomb plaza  
 three days a week. And, as the city opens  
 up,  Movement  Speaks™  has  expanded  
 its outdoor programming to 10 locations  
 around the city. 
 Naomi has taught in Washington Square  
 Park  for many  summers  and  Parks  just  
 fi nally gave the okay for her program to begin  
 June 1, which will run until September. 
 For  information about in-person and  
 continuing  remote  classes,  and upcoming  
 performances (outdoors and on-line):  
 www.dvpnyc.org. 
 The morning begins with a series of stretches. 
 12     June 3, 2021 Schneps Media 
 
				
/www.dvpnyc.org
		/www.dvpnyc.org