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A show of purple to spotlight domestic violence

New York Teacher

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Staff at Jeanine Cammarata’s first school — PS 251 in Flatlands, Brooklyn — atte
Jonathan Fickies

Staff at Jeanine Cammarata’s first school — PS 251 in Flatlands, Brooklyn — attended a memorial breakfast, organized by Chapter Leader Dennis Micklin, and wore purple, the color of domestic violence awareness. When she worked there, her name was Jeanine Ross Gubitosi.

The former colleagues of murdered teacher Jeanine Cammarata held events at their schools in her memory while grappling with how to raise awareness about domestic violence.

Read Jeanine's obituary »

Members at PS 251 in Flatlands, Brooklyn, where Cammarata taught for eight years starting in 2006, held a memorial breakfast and wore purple, the color symbolizing domestic violence awareness. The staff took a collection and planned to donate it to a Go Fund Me page for Cammarata’s children, according to Chapter Leader Dennis Micklin.

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At PS 29, where Cammarata worked this year, Chapter Leader Brian Stephens create
Jonathan Fickies

At PS 29, where Cammarata worked this year, Chapter Leader Brian Stephens created a purple bench memorial outside the school.

Staff at PS 29 in Castleton Corners, Staten Island, where Cammarata taught 1st grade this year, dedicated a garden memorial in her honor. A ceremony was also planned for May 3 in which students were to place rocks they painted on the school’s “kindness path” in Cammarata’s memory, according to Chapter Leader Brian Stephens.

UFT staff, including representatives of the union’s Member Assistance Program, visited PS 18 on Staten Island in the days immediately after her body was discovered, and UFT President Michael Mulgrew met with staff on April 12. Cammarata taught pre-K at the school for four years, and one of her children was a student there.

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UFT District 31 Representative Sean Rotkowitz (foreground) meets with UFT member
Jonathan Fickies

UFT District 31 Representative Sean Rotkowitz (foreground) meets with UFT members from PS 18 to discuss ways to honor Cammarata’s memory and shed light on the evil of domestic violence.

PS 18 members met to consider fundraisers such as charity walks and T-shirt sales for Cammarata’s three children or for domestic abuse shelters. In the longer term, they discussed how to inform school communities about the signs of domestic abuse and lobbying for effective domestic violence legislation.

Chapter Leader Dana Mahoney and Delegate Nancy Rogina introduced a resolution at the UFT Delegate Assembly on April 17 to promote domestic violence awareness in Cammarata’s memory. The resolution was unanimously approved.

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