The Day

MURAL HAS MESSAGE OF WELCOME

Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School is site for third such work of public art

- By JOHANA VAZQUEZ

Old Lyme — Situated on a wall outside the middle school gymnasium, a new mural portrays students of different background­s and abilities holding hands as they trek through troubled waters.

Public Art for Racial Justice Education (PARJE) dedicated the mural Sunday at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School with one central message: Welcome.

“It brightens up the hallway,” middle school student Maggie Thuma said of the new mural in her school. “It's really cool how different nationalit­ies and religions are in it and that shows the welcoming topic.”

The mural is the third dedicated by the group over the past two years, as it creates a series of “sister murals” across the region designed to foster education and stimulate conversati­ons regarding systemic injustices that predominan­tly affect people of color. Last month, a mural was unveiled at Fulton Park in New London.

PARJE Steering Committee Cochair Nancy Gladwell said Sunday the newest mural pays tribute to Old Lyme's history of welcoming refugees from countries such as Laos, Congo and Pakistan. She said the children of Old Lyme have been welcoming to the new families and received them open-heartedly.

“It was awesome,” lead artist Jasmine Oyola-Blumenthal said of the mural collaborat­ion. She said it started with a workshop of more than 60 students who brainstorm­ed ideas about what welcome means and looks like to them.

“Together, we discussed that the word welcome means to embrace diversity, difference­s and to promote equality,” she said.

Oyola-Blumenthal, who is based in Virginia and attended the Lyme Academy of Fine Arts, said she worked on the painting with middle school art teacher Thelma Halloran and about 30 students.

Many of the images in the mural are representa­tive of historical figures and events. Oyola-Blumenthal said the 14 stacked stones to the bottom left of the mural symbolize the many enslaved individual­s from the Lyme area and symbolize perseveran­ce and balance.

Eddie Long, the other cochair of the PARJE steering committee, said the installati­on of the mural is just the beginning of the group's work.

“This is about more than beautifica­tion,” he said during the dedication ceremony in the auditorium. “This is about community engagement at its core.”

Long said the locations for the sister murals serve as places to hold presentati­ons, lectures and performanc­es on issues that affect everybody but disproport­ionately minorities. He said the organizati­on is looking to tackle other conversati­ons about topics such as housing and the environmen­t.

The group expects to complete two more murals. One is underway in East Lyme and the other is in the beginning stages in Groton. But Long said they do not intend to stop there and hope to draw more communitie­s to the project.

The dedication lasted about two hours and featured 13 speakers, including First Selectman Tim Griswold and Sistah Anyango of the Freedom to Love the You in You Movement program from West Hartford, who energized the room with a chant. The event also had performanc­es and poetry readings by students.

Swaranjit Singh Khalsa, a Norwich city councilor and art gallery owner, spoke and attested to how the sister mural in Norwich has been a source of tourism and a place for conversati­on. He said just recently it was the chosen site for a vigil to commemorat­e the victims of the Buffalo mass shooting.

 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Speaker Sistah Anyango, left, with the FLYY Movement, and Steering Committee member Elizabeth Rougny speak Sunday following a mural reveal ceremony for Public Art for Racial Justice Education’s Sister Mural at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School. The mural is part of the nonprofit PARJE’s Sister Mural project to bring together towns in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t through art and community.
PHOTOS BY SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Speaker Sistah Anyango, left, with the FLYY Movement, and Steering Committee member Elizabeth Rougny speak Sunday following a mural reveal ceremony for Public Art for Racial Justice Education’s Sister Mural at Lyme-Old Lyme Middle School. The mural is part of the nonprofit PARJE’s Sister Mural project to bring together towns in southeaste­rn Connecticu­t through art and community.
 ?? ?? Alicia Tyson of New London takes a closer look at the mural.
Alicia Tyson of New London takes a closer look at the mural.

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