Besides Carson McCullers, the Nyack area’s other major literary luminary was Toni Morrison. While walking in the village’s Memorial Park a couple of weekends ago, I came across and took a photo of this commemoration of African-American history that the Nobel Literature laureate (who resided a few miles away, in Grandview-on-Hudson) highlighted.
Ten years
ago this past May, as part of the Toni Morrison Society’s “Bench on the Road”
project, the novelist attended a public ceremony commemorating an
individual who was part of the vast diaspora resulting from the forced “Middle
Passage” from African freedom to American slavery.
The
project took its name from Morrison’s 1989 observation about the lack of public
places “to think about…to summon the presences of, or recollect the absences of
slaves.”
This
roadside monument honors Cynthia Hesdra, a former slave who became a
successful businesswoman and property owner in Nyack. As a conductor on the Underground Railroad, she aided others from the South in achieving the liberty and
opportunity she had come to enjoy.
The Underground
Railroad involved the transfer of an estimated 30,000 to 100,000 people to
freedom—a mass movement in which countless ordinary citizens performed extraordinary
deeds. They changed America forever by defying legally sanctioned, government-sponsored,
shameful racism.
Visitors passing
through Nyack would do well to ponder how Cynthia Hesdra did her part, and how
each of us could do ours now.





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