After nearly seven months of meetings and marches, the Hart Island Touchstone Coalition will be able to place their bereavement stone on the island.
The city confirmed the move Thursday.
“This monument has been approved to be temporarily installed on Hart Island, and we are coordinating with the group on the logistics of transporting the monument to the island,” a spokesperson from the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation told the Bronx Times via email on Thursday. “The long term positioning (and) location is still under discussion.”
The coalition, led by coordinator Elsie Soto, is a group advocating for the placement of a seven-by-four touchstone to properly memorialize all those buried on the island in unmarked graves — bodies that went unclaimed after their death, whose family did not have the financial means to bury them, or who died of pandemic diseases.
The stone — which was donated by the Peace Abbey Foundation, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit that aims to create and install public works of art that promote peace — is adorned with the words “Global Pandemics; Touchstone for Humanity.”
Local advocates pushing for memorial touchstone on Hart Island run into roadblocks
The small isle off the eastern coast of the Bronx, also known as the City Cemetery or Potter’s Field, is a mass graveyard that hosts more than 1 million New Yorkers. When the city began using Hart Island as a public burial site in 1869, plots were occupied by people who “died indigent.” And most recently the island was used to bury people who died of epidemic and pandemic diseases, most notably AIDS and COVID-19.
Soto, whose father died of AIDS-related complications when she was 9 years old, was buried on Hart Island. She told the Bronx Times in a previous interview that it took her more than 20 years to be able to finally visit his grave.
She ran into a bit of bureaucratic red tape trying to get city approval over the past seven months, describing a lack of…
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