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Turkey

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In Line with Jive Turkey

The line begins outside Jive Turkey

The line begins outside Jive Turkey

Thanksgiving in Clinton Hill just wouldn’t be the same without the around-the-block lines to Jive Turkey, leading up to the big day. This has been my second year witnessing the massive lines down Myrtle Ave., smelling the scent of cooked turkey from blocks away and watching as employees work late into the night as they pack hundreds of boxes with fried turkeys to ship around the country. This morning as I walked by folks were sitting in folding chairs, drinking coffee out of thermoses and chatting as they waited to be let into the store to claim their order. I’ve never tasted fried turkey before, but it seems to be a force to be reckoned with.

The instigator of this local turkey craze is Jive Turkey owner Aricka Westbrooks who was the recipient of a business grant from Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation. Ms. Westbrooks used the funds to open the business.

To hear more about Restoration’s diverse work check out BHS’ oral history collection of over 50 interviews with founding Board members, supporters, activists, artists, tenants and other community members who helped shape the organization’s work over the years.

Oral History in Turkey

Oral history workshops are becoming really popular in Turkey.

Professor Leyla Neyzi, who leads the workshops, was quoted in the New York Times as saying, “We have started to think very differently about our history.  The past is being rethought in terms of the demands of the present.”

Yesterday, we hosted a workshop for teachers regarding our oral history exhibition In Our Own Words: Portraits of Brooklyn Vietnam Veterans.  We discussed ways to teach contested histories and difficult material; using oral history as a tool in the classroom both to bring history alive and to teach important listening skills; and we were lucky to hear from three Vietnam Veterans, Michael Palo, Rudy Thomas, and Bill Kupper, who generously and courageously shared their stories with us and answered our questions.

Here are two more oral history events coming up soon:

Women Veterans: Citizen-Soldiers in Changing Times
March 5, 2009
6:30 – 8:30pm

Listening to Women: Documenting Women’s Lives through Oral History
Registration deadline February 25, 2009