75 Morton middle school principal Valerie Leak cancels 'Merchant of Venice' for antisemitic theme
75 Morton middle school's principal Valerie Leak canceled the school's production of Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Vence" on account of anti-semitic slur
The principal of a middle school in Manhattan has canceled its production of Shakespeare's 'The Merchant of Venice' after some parents expressed concern over its antisemitic theme and whether the material was appropriate for middle schoolers.
The first-year principal Valerie Leak scrapped the play without any warning or prior discussion. The play was set to be performed by the seventh-grade drama students at 75 Morton in New York, which is a popular middle school in Greenwich Village.
Valerie Leak is the first year principal of 75 Morton school and she works under the New York City Department of Education (NYC DOE). She is also a literacy coach. Under her leadership, 75 Morton has a gender and sexuality alliance committee and a Black Student Union to build a more inclusive school environment. Leak often sends messages about helping others and working for others in her letters which is updated on the school website.
Principal Valerie Leak
A report by the New York Post
says, there was a divide between parents at the school, with some
calling for the play's cancelation and others wanting to open a dialogue
about the themes of the play. The news of play's cancelation comes
after a Tennessee school board scrapped the Holocaust-themed graphic
novel, Maus,
voting unanimously to remove the Pulitzer Prize-winning book from its
eighth-grade curriculum over a drawing of a nude woman, eight swear
words and its 'not wise or healthy' content. This has lead to some
controversy and some heated opinions.
Now, the Greenwich Village school is also embroiled in a controversy over the 16th-century Shakespeare classic about a merchant in Venice named Antonio who defaults on a large loan provided by a Jewish money lender named Shylock — a term that has come to be considered an antisemitic slur.
But these discussions never happened, and the play was just abruptly canceled. Instead of a proper discussion or meeting, parents received an email from the school last month explaining the cancelation. "Members of our community have expressed their objection to this play due to concerns about racist and antisemitic language. And while the company designed the curriculum with input from the ADL (Anti-Defamation League) to ensure that the challenging themes of the piece would be treated with the proper critical analysis, sensitivity, and thoughtfulness, we have decided to move forward with a different unit with the Theater."
Joe Sherinsky, one of the parents at the school, told The Post that by cancelling the production, the principal missed a 'teachable moment.' "I think it needs to be properly contextualized," he said. "There are great lessons in the Merchant of Venice. You can takes names like Shylock and apply them broadly into lessons about racism. But in order to teach that properly you need to have enough context as parents to say that this is something good for the school to do." He has praised Leak overall, but said he would have liked a more meaningful exchange on the issue. But as of now, instead of selecting a new production, the school has opted to focus on a playwriting curriculum.
1 comment:
Of course it was antisemitic. I strongly suspect that pretty much every educated non-Jew in England at that time was an antisemite. That does not mean it is not a worthwhile play. It should be judged in the times in which it was created. The same could be said of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. They were an accurate reflection of the time in which they were created.
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