Monday, October 15, 2007
Photo of Unity Walk from Pottstown Mercury
Article on 2007 Unity Walk from Reading Eagle
Boyertown's Unity Walk promotes tolerance
Walking with a message is.
Stopping traffic and filling streets, an estimated 2,000 men, women and children walked Boyertown in the fourth annual Unity Walk on Sunday.
Stepping to support diversity and tolerance, the walkers drew attention.
Neighbors watched and passing motorists inquired about the event.
Many walkers, including Sarah E. Green, 15, said they participated to help rid Boyertown of its label as a racist community.
"We can show that we are going to support everybody," she said.
When the Unity Walk began in 2003 after a cross-burning incident, about 200 people participated, said Terry L. Wade, chairman of the Boyertown Area Unity Coalition, the nonprofit group that founded the event.
The number of participants has nearly doubled every year.
"It doesn’t matter how many people we have," Wade said. "If we have five people, it’s a good thing."
Below are five area residents who opted to spend their October Sunday walking with a purpose.
As she walked the Unity Walk, Gwendolyn R. Carver, 38, recalled marching as a child with her parents in a push for the creation of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
On Sunday, she was the parent leading her children to walk for a cause.
"If any harm is done to anyone, it is done to me, and I stand against it," said Carver, an Upper Frederick Township, Montgomery County, resident. "I can’t teach my children that and not live it."
This is the fourth year she, her husband and their two children participated.
When they first moved to the Boyertown area from Washington, D.C., Carver was concerned to hear about racism in the community.
To this day, however, she said she has not experienced direct racism. Instead, the community has welcomed her family.
Not in our town.
That’s the message 48-year-old GiGi C. Malinchak says the Unity Walk sends about racism.
Her desire to send that message loud and clear is one reason the Colebrookdale Township resident supports the event with both her feet and her wallet.
Malinchak owns GiGi’s At Home Pet Care, a primary sponsor of the Unity Walk. In addition, she’s on the event’s planning committee.
"I think it’s important to show people that there are a lot of people who are not racist in Boyertown, that we won’t just accept it," Malinchak said. On Sunday, she walked with family members for what she calls her big cause. "Racism is something that I can’t tolerate at all," she said, later adding, "I think it’s hurtful, and it’s not necessary." No gray area here: This issue is black and white to 15-year-old Matt D. Gerhart. "Racism in general is wrong, and I don’t really think a community is right to accept racism," said the Owen J. Roberts High School sophomore. Sunday marked the first year he and his twin brother, Greg M., participated in the event. "There’s all these stereotypes that Boyertown is racist, and this walk is a good way to create a more welcome community for everyone, no matter what race you are," Matt Gerhart said. Looking around at the people eating together, talking together and otherwise getting along, his brother, Greg, said, "That’s what it’s all about." "I think it’s a good way for the whole community of Boyertown and the surrounding areas to come together as a community," Greg Gerhart added. Walking with her husband and children, adopted from Guatemala, Lynn E. Wallace felt encouraged by the crowd around her Sunday. "I think it’s really important that people foster a diverse community," the 42-year-old Earl Township resident said. Stereotypes that categorize people by race don’t allow individuals’ gifts to shine, and that is limiting to a community, she added. "People who can’t tolerate different shades of skin aren’t going to tolerate differences of opinion or anything," Wallace said. This year, the family, including 6-year-old Duncan and 2-year-old Claire, didn’t partake in the festivities before the walk, which included a bounce house, face paintings and crafts. They might next year when they return to support the cause. For Alexander N. Caputo, 9, the Unity Walk is about making people happy about each other. "We thought it would be cool to go and help," said the fourth-grade Boyertown Elementary School student, who came with a group. His favorite part of the event was the activities. In one, he traced his hand, cut it out and put it on a paper plate. The craft is called a hand wreath. Inside Boyertown Junior High West, children also were asked to write on a card something mean they’ve said or something mean that’s been said to them. They then ripped up the cards. When asked if the Unity Walk is important for his community, Caputo didn’t hesitate. "Yes, very," he replied. "People shouldn’t be being mean to everybody else just because they look different."
• Contact reporter Michelle Park at 610-371-5022 or mpark@readingeagle.com.
| ©2007 Reading Eagle Company |
Article on 2007 Unity Walk from Reading Eagle
Boyertown's Unity Walk promotes tolerance
Walking with a message is.
Stopping traffic and filling streets, an estimated 2,000 men, women and children walked Boyertown in the fourth annual Unity Walk on Sunday.
Stepping to support diversity and tolerance, the walkers drew attention.
Neighbors watched and passing motorists inquired about the event.
Many walkers, including Sarah E. Green, 15, said they participated to help rid Boyertown of its label as a racist community.
"We can show that we are going to support everybody," she said.
When the Unity Walk began in 2003 after a cross-burning incident, about 200 people participated, said Terry L. Wade, chairman of the Boyertown Area Unity Coalition, the nonprofit group that founded the event.
The number of participants has nearly doubled every year.
"It doesn’t matter how many people we have," Wade said. "If we have five people, it’s a good thing."
Below are five area residents who opted to spend their October Sunday walking with a purpose.
As she walked the Unity Walk, Gwendolyn R. Carver, 38, recalled marching as a child with her parents in a push for the creation of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
On Sunday, she was the parent leading her children to walk for a cause.
"If any harm is done to anyone, it is done to me, and I stand against it," said Carver, an Upper Frederick Township, Montgomery County, resident. "I can’t teach my children that and not live it."
This is the fourth year she, her husband and their two children participated.
When they first moved to the Boyertown area from Washington, D.C., Carver was concerned to hear about racism in the community.
To this day, however, she said she has not experienced direct racism. Instead, the community has welcomed her family.
Not in our town.
That’s the message 48-year-old GiGi C. Malinchak says the Unity Walk sends about racism.
Her desire to send that message loud and clear is one reason the Colebrookdale Township resident supports the event with both her feet and her wallet.
Malinchak owns GiGi’s At Home Pet Care, a primary sponsor of the Unity Walk. In addition, she’s on the event’s planning committee.
"I think it’s important to show people that there are a lot of people who are not racist in Boyertown, that we won’t just accept it," Malinchak said.
On Sunday, she walked with family members for what she calls her big cause.
"Racism is something that I can’t tolerate at all," she said, later adding, "I think it’s hurtful, and it’s not necessary."
No gray area here: This issue is black and white to 15-year-old Matt D. Gerhart.
"Racism in general is wrong, and I don’t really think a community is right to accept racism," said the Owen J. Roberts High School sophomore.
Sunday marked the first year he and his twin brother, Greg M., participated in the event.
"There’s all these stereotypes that Boyertown is racist, and this walk is a good way to create a more welcome community for everyone, no matter what race you are," Matt Gerhart said.
Looking around at the people eating together, talking together and otherwise getting along, his brother, Greg, said, "That’s what it’s all about."
"I think it’s a good way for the whole community of Boyertown and the surrounding areas to come together as a community," Greg Gerhart added.
Walking with her husband and children, adopted from Guatemala, Lynn E. Wallace felt encouraged by the crowd around her Sunday.
"I think it’s really important that people foster a diverse community," the 42-year-old Earl Township resident said.
Stereotypes that categorize people by race don’t allow individuals’ gifts to shine, and that is limiting to a community, she added.
"People who can’t tolerate different shades of skin aren’t going to tolerate differences of opinion or anything," Wallace said.
This year, the family, including 6-year-old Duncan and 2-year-old Claire, didn’t partake in the festivities before the walk, which included a bounce house, face paintings and crafts.
They might next year when they return to support the cause.
For Alexander N. Caputo, 9, the Unity Walk is about making people happy about each other.
"We thought it would be cool to go and help," said the fourth-grade Boyertown Elementary School student, who came with a group.
His favorite part of the event was the activities. In one, he traced his hand, cut it out and put it on a paper plate. The craft is called a hand wreath.
Inside Boyertown Junior High West, children also were asked to write on a card something mean they’ve said or something mean that’s been said to them. They then ripped up the cards.
When asked if the Unity Walk is important for his community, Caputo didn’t hesitate.
"Yes, very," he replied. "People shouldn’t be being mean to everybody else just because they look different."
• Contact reporter Michelle Park at 610-371-5022 or mpark@readingeagle.com.
| ©2007 Reading Eagle Company |
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Student's video shows how hate can hide fear
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Student's video shows how hate can hide fear
Brandie Kessler, bkessler@pottsmerc.com
05/02/2007
BOYERTOWN -- Students and faculty at Boyertown Area High School got closer to making their school one that accepts diversity with a No Place for Hate activity organized by students on the day of the statewide celebration of the program Tuesday.
Assistant Principal Shirley J. Lutz said one student, 12th-grader Sarah Ray, combined an assignment for a television class with a project celebrating No Place for Hate, a statewide program developed and implemented by the Anti-Defamation League that encourages education as a means to grow and understand diversity and challenge prejudice and discrimination.
Ray made a video designed to get students thinking about diversity and breaking down the walls they may consciously or unconsciously build up.
"This is the second year that the state has designated this a statewide no place for hate day," Lutz said, explaining that last year Boyertown schools read "The Sneetches" by Dr. Seuss for their activity. "This year we wanted to make (the day's activity) a little bit more personally meaningful."
The video featured the song "Weeping" by Josh Groban as the background sound.
The song lyrics, Lutz explained, were written by Dan Heymann in 1987 when Heymann, a white South African, was drafted into the South African army during apartheid. Heymann did not want to fight and wrote the song as a protest to the oppressive white government.
"It was against apartheid and specifically talking about them putting up walls against fears, and so that's what the video dealt with," Lutz said. "Showing people's fears and showing that we have to face our fears; you can't put up walls."
Lutz said she's heard positive feedback from teachers and students alike regarding the video, and the No Place for Hate activity, which gave teachers an opportunity to include lessons about diversity and acceptance in their classroom instruction.
"The one thing we still have to work on explaining is that being a No Place for Hate school is a journey," Lutz said. "That it's a journey, it's an exciting journey and I see the students being more and more involved and coming up with more important activities."
For more information about No Place for Hate visit www.noplaceforhate.org
For more information about the story of the song "Weeping," visit www.weeping.info
Friday, May 19, 2006
Two new area schools designated "No Place for Hate"
Sunday, April 02, 2006
Meeting on Monday, April 10
The Boyertown Area Unity Coalition (BAUC) was formed in 1994 with the mission, “to create and nurture a caring community climate in which respect for all persons, young and old, is cultivated and in which bigotry is rejected.” For more information, please visit the website at www.boyertownunitycoalition.org or call 610-781-1455. If anyone witnesses or is a victim of hate activity, report it to the BAUC or to the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission at www.stopbias.org.
Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Another area school designated "No Place for Hate"
Unity Walk in Boyertown on Oct. 17, 2005

A community outraged by a bias incident last year holds a Unity Walk on Sunday to demonstrate its commitment to racial harmony. About 1,000 people participate.
> By Phoebe Sweet
> Reading Eagle
March 2005: Boyertown Picks Diversity Panel
June 2005: Racial crime again rears ugly head in Boyertown
However, this time the assailant was not a middle-aged, rumored former Klan member, but he was a juvenile - merely an 11-year-old boy.
The juvenile male has been referred to juvenile court by Colebrookdale District police for ethnic intimidation and criminal mischief after using motor oil and tire repair fluid to slather racial epithets on the driveway and deck of Nadiyah Gary, 35, of 1263 County Line Road, according to Det. David Guida of Colebrookdale District police.
The male lives a few houses away from Gary on County Line Road in the 1200 block, which is near Cabot Supermetals. Over three separate occasions the incidents occurred, which started in the beginning of the month.
May 2005: Neo-Nazis in Boyertown
On Mother's Day and again on Sunday, May 22, several males were spotted in Boyertown, wearing "Neo-Nazi" apparel and handing out informatioN.
