アリソン・ピルさんのインスタグラム写真 - (アリソン・ピルInstagram)「She will be so missed. What an incredible woman, always on the right side of a moral fight. Posted @withregram • @thejoshualeonard It’s surreal to be writing a second farewell tribute today for another human that I loved with all my heart. It’s been a year of many goodbyes over here -- a year of many tears and all the proof I ever needed to know that WE ARE IMPERMANENT. This is the one true thing, so please be kind. Love your people... now and HARD and while you still can.  For those of you who know me, you know my Great Aunt Frances has been one of the most important figures in my life. I met her in my late teens when I moved to NYC. I was a mess of a human and I didn’t have a pot to piss in. What I did have was a phone number for some badass, socialist, great aunt that I supposedly had in the East Village... so I called her and I introduced myself. She said I could come stay with her for a while I got on my feet... to be clear, what she actually said was this, “Come on Sunday. I’ll be in jail in Philly on a civil disobedience case (she was already in her late 60’s by then), but grab the key from the super and let yourself in. There’s Matzoh Ball soup in the fridge”  Frances Goldin was my hero. She was a GREAT woman in the truest sense of the word. She achieved more in one lifetime than most of us would in 20. She lived a life of service -- and all with her fist held high. She started the first radical literary agency in NYC in the early 70’s and went on to represent authors like Barbara Kingsolver, Dorothy Allison, Adrienne Rich, Mumia Abu Jamal, Ralph Nadar and Frank Serpico. She fought for tenant rights and affordable housing for over 50 YEARS as a co-founder of Cooper Square (and as a result, recently had a building in the L.E.S. named after her). She was a single mother to two amazing lesbian daughters, and she was a FIGHTER -- a voice of the voiceless when it was VERY INCONVENIENT to be so. She stood in solidarity with the oppressed on every picket line, at the front of every social justice protest... and spent countless nights in jail cells as a result.  She was a killer Scrabble player, a lover of rugelach, a generous tipper, the best hugger... and my f」5月17日 23時14分 - msalisonpill

アリソン・ピルのインスタグラム(msalisonpill) - 5月17日 23時14分


She will be so missed. What an incredible woman, always on the right side of a moral fight. Posted @withregram@ジョシュア・レナード It’s surreal to be writing a second farewell tribute today for another human that I loved with all my heart. It’s been a year of many goodbyes over here -- a year of many tears and all the proof I ever needed to know that WE ARE IMPERMANENT. This is the one true thing, so please be kind. Love your people... now and HARD and while you still can.

For those of you who know me, you know my Great Aunt Frances has been one of the most important figures in my life. I met her in my late teens when I moved to NYC. I was a mess of a human and I didn’t have a pot to piss in. What I did have was a phone number for some badass, socialist, great aunt that I supposedly had in the East Village... so I called her and I introduced myself. She said I could come stay with her for a while I got on my feet... to be clear, what she actually said was this, “Come on Sunday. I’ll be in jail in Philly on a civil disobedience case (she was already in her late 60’s by then), but grab the key from the super and let yourself in. There’s Matzoh Ball soup in the fridge”

Frances Goldin was my hero. She was a GREAT woman in the truest sense of the word. She achieved more in one lifetime than most of us would in 20. She lived a life of service -- and all with her fist held high. She started the first radical literary agency in NYC in the early 70’s and went on to represent authors like Barbara Kingsolver, Dorothy Allison, Adrienne Rich, Mumia Abu Jamal, Ralph Nadar and Frank Serpico. She fought for tenant rights and affordable housing for over 50 YEARS as a co-founder of Cooper Square (and as a result, recently had a building in the L.E.S. named after her). She was a single mother to two amazing lesbian daughters, and she was a FIGHTER -- a voice of the voiceless when it was VERY INCONVENIENT to be so. She stood in solidarity with the oppressed on every picket line, at the front of every social justice protest... and spent countless nights in jail cells as a result.

She was a killer Scrabble player, a lover of rugelach, a generous tipper, the best hugger... and my f


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