New York Post

Faithful having nun of city statue slight

- By SARA DORN sdorn@nypost.com

Catholics want Chirlane McCray to repent.

The faithful raised holy hell this past week after The Post reported the city first lady’s “She Built NYC” program for statues honoring exceptiona­l women rejected the public’s choice of iconic sister Frances Xavier Cabrini.

Cabrini, the first American saint, devoted her life to helping the needy in the late 1800s, but got passed over despite receiving 219 votes, more than any other nominee.

City Councilman Justin Brannan fired off an angry letter to McCray’s office on Monday, saying “Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini, who received more nomination­s from New Yorkers than any other woman during the process, has been completely ignored.

“My simple question is this: why open this for a public vote and then ignore the results?” the councilman asked.

Congregant­s at her namesake church in Bensonhurs­t were “very disappoint­ed” after learning she would not be among the seven women selected, said Rev. Guy Sbordone.

“People were a little taken aback, and rightfully so,” he said. “They’re thinking about their vote and what it meant and why it isn’t being honored.”

Among Cabrini’s work was teaching children, including Sbordone’s grandmothe­r, in the early 1900s at Transfigur­ation School in Little Italy.

The Italian-born patron saint of immigrants was one of four of the public’s top picks to be snubbed by McCray and ex-Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen’s group.

Instead, they selected 19th century civil-rights leader Elizabeth Jennings Graham, jazz singer Billie Holiday, abortion-rights activist Dr. Helen Rodriguez Trías and transgende­r advocate Sylvia Rivera.

Three women favored in poll were chosen by McCray: Congresswo­man Shirley Chisholm, lighthouse keeper Katherine Walker and LGBTQ rights activist Marsha P. Johnson.

And in another apparent bow to political correctnes­s, a panel appointed by Mayor de Blasio charged with looking into all public-art proposals examined plans to put up a monument for Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony in Central Park.

It recommende­d that the privately funded group honor women of color, and Monday it was decided that Sojourner Truth would be added to the monument, set to be built next year.

Meanwhile the “She Built NYC” selections process remains murky.

It got $5 million from $10 million that Hizzoner set aside after a de Blasioappo­inted committee — formed to investigat­e “symbols of hate on city property” in the wake of violence by white supremacis­ts over a Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottes­ville, Va., — recommende­d a more “inclusive” stock of public art.

Four members of McCray’s panel also served on de Blasio’s statues committee. Both are led by Cultural Affairs Commission­er Thomas Finkelpear­l, a former Queens Museum exec hired by de Blasio in 2014.

 ??  ?? GO FIGURE: City Councilman Justin Brannan wants to know why Chirlane McCray’s “She Built NYC” program let the public vote on which women to honor with statues but then ignored the winner, Sister Frances Xavier Cabrini (center).
GO FIGURE: City Councilman Justin Brannan wants to know why Chirlane McCray’s “She Built NYC” program let the public vote on which women to honor with statues but then ignored the winner, Sister Frances Xavier Cabrini (center).

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