Peace activist and promoter
has new cause: saving house

By Guy D’Astolfo
Youngstown Vindicator


Youngstown OH,  Sept 17, 2009  —  Like the house she lives in on Wick Park,
Therese Joseph is a keystone of her community, standing against the prevailing
current. Joseph  owns the grand, turret-crowned home at 204 Broadway.

    It’s on a street of old mansions that, for the most part,
    have fallen into disrepair as the neighborhood
    declined.  Her spacious home serves as the
    headquarters for Peace Action / Youngstown. It’s
    the local chapter of Peace Action for a Sane World,
    which is the nation’s largest grassroots organization for
    peace and social-justice causes. She is co-
    chairwoman of the chapter.

    Joseph has lived in the house since 1989, restoring it
    with the help of the North Side Coalition. In the past 20
    years, the structure has hosted countless political
    gatherings, neighborhood watch meetings and
    concerts. But Joseph is in danger of losing the house.
    She took out a loan in recent years, using the house’s
    equity as collateral to finance a failed business venture
    with her then-husband. Now she faces foreclosure and
    must raise $20,000 within 60-90 days.

Toward that end, she has organized several fundraisers, including a
performance by the burlesque troupe Nice Jewish Girls Gone Bad at the Lemon
Grove in August. She also has lined up a concert by legendary Akron jazz-
rockers 15-60-75 (The Numbers Band) this Saturday at The Youngstown Club.

Over the past two decades, Joseph has promoted about 400 concerts at various
Youngstown venues, including the Maennerchor, Cedars Lounge, and the
former Pyatt Street Downunder and Inner Works Coffee House (both of which
she used to own), as well as at her Wick Park home, which has been dubbed
Peace House.

“Music is one of the main ways people connect,” she said, noting it’s also a way
to get people involved in the cause for peace.

But Saturday’s concert will be her last for a while, as she must devote her
attention to saving Peace House..

During a reporter’s 90-minute visit to Joseph’s eclectically filled home this week,
the phone repeatedly rang. “I provide rides to the store for about seven people
in the neighborhood, people who don’t have cars,” she said. Visitors also
stopped in on community business. “People know I have connections and can
do things for them,” she said. Joseph wants to stay put and continue her work. “I’
ve lived through the worst years of this neighborhood, and I’d like to be here
when it gets better,” she said.

But first she must find a way out of her jam.

Ray Nakley of Youngstown, also a member of Peace Action, has been a
colleague of Joseph’s for decades. He said Joseph is “a unique individual. It’s a
clich , but she really is a special person. She has kept Peace Action together for
years by opening her home to it. There are many of us who remember and
appreciate everything she’s done over the years.

“She’s an extremely generous person,” he continued. “She appreciates and tries
to promote the arts and has a passion for the most important things, like living in
peace and appreciating human talents.” Judith Szabo, president of Art
Youngstown, said Joseph, who is a board member of the group, “has been a
keystone of the arts and entertainment in the Youngstown community for many,
many years.”

Joseph does a number of things for income, including freelance graphic-art work
and costuming for theater companies. Racks of vintage costumes occupy one of
her house’s large rooms. But if she can first satisfy her bank debt, Joseph wants
to reinvent her house into a business. She would like to take on a partner or
investor — one who appreciates music, old houses and city neighborhoods —
who can help her turn the house into a business, perhaps a salon for thinkers
and musicians.

Doing so would also keep the house out of the hands of an absentee landlord,
she said. Joseph cringed at the thought of seeing it subdivided into apartments.

Joseph will hold a sale at her home, beginning  October 2  Costumes, vintage
record albums, collectibles and assorted kitsch are available. Hours are 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m., but Joseph recommends calling first — (330) 747-5404 — or e-mailing
her at therese@paytown.org
ENTER
GreatNites.com
PoliteSavage
P
erformances
for Peace
Therese Joseph, director of Peace
Action / Youngstown
The Youngstown Peace House
FOR MORE THAN 20 YEARS, WE'VE WORKED FOR PEACE THROUGH COMMUNITY COMMITMENT, ISSUES INTERCHANGE AND ARTS PRESENTATIONS
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