The Broadsheet - Lower Manhattans Local Newspaper
In Memoriam: Kathy Gupta (1950-2022)
Another Leader Who Helped Build (and Rebuild) Battery Park City Lost to September 11-Related Illness
Community leader Kathy Gupta (shown here at a 2021 meeting, arguing against a plan for a controversial monument in Battery Park City) died Saturday, after decades of organizing and advocating for Battery Park City.
On Saturday, longtime Battery Park City resident and community leader Kathy Gupta died in her home, in Gateway Plaza. This makes her the latest in a succession of community leaders and longtime residents made gravely ill and then taken by an illness arising from exposure to environmental toxins on September 11, 2001, and in the weeks and months that followed.

Her son, Arun Gupta, said, “words can not fully express what she meant to my father, myself, my family and everyone she has come into contact with over the 72 years of her life. My mom was a truly amazing woman who left a lasting impact on everyone she met. She helped build strong, lasting communities everywhere she went, lived or worked. We loved her very much and will miss her deeply.”

Ms. Gupta and her husband, Udayan, were expecting Arun when they moved into Gateway Plaza in 1983, becoming some of the earliest residents of Battery Park City. “They had these ‘Keep Off the Grass’ signs everywhere,” she recalled for the Broadsheet in 2007. “The only place where kids could play in those days was the courtyard of Gateway Plaza. But if children tried to sit on the lawn, the security guards would come and tell us we had to stay on the sidewalk or sit on the benches.”

Along with a Gateway neighbor who would become her closest friend, Lois Eida, Ms. Gupta helped form the Battery Park City Parents Association that year. “During our first summer here, we would walk up to anybody who had a baby in a carriage and try to get to know them,” Ms. Gupta remembered. “By fall, we had made contact with seven or eight couples who had kids.” Among the Association’s first moves was to approach the Battery Park City Authority to request a playground.

“That’s how Pumpkin Park came into being,” Ms. Gupta recalled. “The Authority worked with us, and chose a location behind Gateway Plaza, overlooking the marina.” The name comes from the fact that the playground opened a few days before Halloween, 1986, but also refers whimsically to the underground water pumping station (which services the enormous climate-control systems of the World Trade Center) located beneath the park. “That was also the beginning of the Battery Park City tradition of a kids parade on Halloween,” Ms. Gupta noted of an observance that persisted for decades, eventually moving indoors to what was then the World Financial Center (now Brookfield Place).

This campaign led to others (also spearheaded by Ms. Gupta), such as the push to bring the first school to Battery Park City. “One of the arguments we kept hearing in the early discussions,” Ms. Gupta observed, “was that the 1980 census showed there were no children living here.” She countered by observing that the same census showed there were no human beings of any age living in Battery Park City (which had not existed in 1980), and the Parents Association began compiling lists of families with children. “Being able to document that we had 25 kids in the neighborhood, then 50 a year later, and then so many we couldn’t keep up” reflected Ms. Gupta, “was very important. Being able to prove this with names and telephone numbers made the decision-makers pay attention.” This push reached fruition a decade later, when P.S. 89 opened in 1997.

Along the way, Ms. Gupta helped assemble the building blocks of a rapidly coalescing community in numberless other ways. “She was the kind of person who could take a big city and turn it into a small town,” recalls Ms. Eida. “She was very strong with tradition and holidays—the whole floor would come to her apartment for Christmas, to decorate the tree and bake holiday cookies. I later found out that she had rented three storage units near Canal Street, which were filled with decorations for different holidays—Christmas, Halloween, Easter, and others.”

Ms. Eida remembers that, “Kathy was also the one who started the Halloween list,” a local innovation that enabled families with young children to trick or treat in every residential building in Battery Park City, which sparked countless lifelong friendships not only among the costumed toddlers, but also between the parents escorting them. “Even after she got sick, she kept up with Halloween and Christmas until last year.”

“She had a gift for creating in her home and in her neighborhood environments that were inclusive and cohesive.” Ms. Eida muses. “She would bring people in to create things. In a sense, Kathy had landed in the perfect spot, because she was a community builder and in those days, Battery Park City was a community that needed building.”

Another project that Ms. Gupta and Ms. Eida (who declared themselves honorary sisters almost 40 years ago) collaborated on was the community gardens, for which they lobbied to build support among the Battery Park City Parks Conservancy and local landlords, who made space available. Ms. Gupta and Udayan maintained a plot together there continually since the gardens opened in the 1980s, where they mentored less-experienced gardeners, and were known for their beautiful dahlias.

A natural leader, she soon joined Community Board 1 (CB1), where she helped start (and get City funding for) a youth recreation program that eventually grew into Manhattan Youth. “Kathy hired me, right out of college, as the Youth Coordinator,” recalls Bob Townley, executive director and founder of Manhattan Youth. “Her son, Arun, eventually worked for me. Our lives were intertwined for decades. She was working for City As Art, as executive director, when I encouraged her to apply for the Henry Street Settlement,” a not-for-profit social service agency in the Lower East Side. She eventually rose to become the chief development officer there, raising millions of dollars to support programs providing food, housing, healthcare services, educational intervention, and arts classes to more than 40,000 clients each year.

Ms. Gupta’s CB1 colleague (and Gateway neighbor) Jeff Galloway recalls, “I always had the sense of Kathy being a pillar of the community. Her son, Arun, is several years older than our children. And she was very much involved in building the park and school constituencies that our kids were able to enjoy and benefit from a few years later.”

“Throughout our service together on CB1 and its Battery Park City Committee,” Mr. Galloway recalls, “you could count on her to speak up about commonsense things that mattered to the community. Whenever we were getting lost in the minutiae of policy, she would bring the discussion back to earth by asking, ‘how will this affect the people who live here?’ She was also an advocate for the people decision makers almost never hear from, the ones who don’t have to time to show up to meetings and complain. Kathy always struck me as the conscience of Battery Park City and Lower Manhattan.”

CB1 chair Tammy Meltzer reflects that, “Kathy had a quiet grace that enabled her to listen while people were hollering at each other, then raise her hand when it was her turn to speak and find a way to bring people together. She was an incredibly kind person, warm and generous in sharing her time and talents. The world has lost a light that shone brightly, but never burned anything it touched.”

Longtime CB1 member and community leader Robin Forst says, “Kathy was ‘original’ Battery Park City. She was part of the Neighbors Association, the Community Board, the groups that pushed for a local school and a local library, and the annual block party. She was always present and always part of everything.”

Ms. Gupta’s leadership rose to a new level following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Although flaming debris ejected from the collapsing Twin Towers completely destroyed the Guptas’ home (relics from their apartment are now on exhibit in the National September 11 Memorial & Museum), they were among the first families to return to Gateway Plaza when it reopened.

“When we got back,” Ms. Eida recalls, “one of the first things that Kathy decided was that she needed a Christmas tree. So we got in my Volvo and drove through Battery Park City, out through the military checkpoints, and found a street vendor in Tribeca selling Christmas trees. Then we turned around and navigated the same obstacle course to get it back to Gateway Plaza.”

“She returned early,” Mr. Galloway recalls, “and was involved in physically rebuilding the community. She took the lead on communications with residents who already returned, and those who were still scattered.” She was soon named to the board of 9-11 United Services Group, an umbrella organization that coordinated the work of all major non-profits responding to the aftermath of September 11.

As the rebuilding process gained momentum, Ms. Gupta was appointed to an advisory panel that offered community input on the design for the World Trade Center Memorial & Museum—a model of consultation and collaboration that is still, decades later, universally regarded as a success. More recently, she drew upon this experience to offer uniquely authoritative criticism for the rushed (and bitterly controversial) 2021 plan by then-Governor Andrew Cuomo to build an Essential Workers Monument in Rockefeller Park, with scant notice and no dialog. (That plan was ultimately placed on indefinite hold.)

Ms. Gupta also served on the 9-11 Survivor Steering Committee, which advises the World Trade Center Health Program, a tenure that would turn out to have deep personal resonance. “On the day her cancer was diagnosed,” Ms. Eida recalls, “Kathy was told she had no more than 11 months to live. That was six years ago. She never gave up—sshe had a life force that was remarkable.”

“Like far too many,” Ms. Forst notes, “Kathy succumbed to a September 11 illness. After 21 years, the specter of that day continues to touch our lives, as we continue to lose friends, many of whom helped our new neighborhood become a real community. Though Kathy was ill, she persisted. I am grateful to have known her and to have called her a friend.”

Ms. Meltzer adds, “I am proud to have known her. Kathy loved everything in a quiet, gentle manner. She was incredibly knowledgeable and intellectually curious with a broad range of experience, and the gift of her advice was valuable beyond measure.”

“Her guidance and leadership and concern have made this community a much better place for everyone who followed,” Ms. Eida concludes. “But she made the world a better place, not just Battery Park City. It’s going to be really hard not to have her in the world.”

The Gupta family are planning multiple observances of her passing. Tomorrow (Wednesday, January 18), there will be a wake at the Greenwich Village Funeral Home (199 Bleecker Street), from 5pm to 8pm. On Thursday (January 19), a mass will be held at 3pm in St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church (22 Barclay Street). And finally, the family will be holding a Celebration of Life party (at a date to be announced in the near future), where everyone who knew Ms. Gupta can honor, remember and commemorate her life.

Matthew Fenton
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Calendar
Tuesday, January 17
10:30am-11:30am
6 River Terrace
Easy-to-follow Latin dance choreography, with a little strength training. Free.

2pm
Livestreamed by the Museum of Jewish Heritage
A Sanctuary in the Storm: Carl Lutz and the Rescue of Budapest’s Jews Budapest, 1944: Vice Consul Carl Lutz and the Swiss Legation of Budapest started the largest diplomatic operation to rescue Jews during WWII. Thanks to an ingenious system of safe-conduct papers and residential buildings put under consular protection, Carl Lutz, who had acted as a protective power representing interests of the U.S. and UK in Hungary, sheltered and saved tens of thousands of Jews. Frederic Hayat, vice president of the Switzerland-based Carl Lutz Society, will deliver a presentation about Lutz and will be joined by Agnès Hirschi, Lutz’s stepdaughter, and Charles Gati, a Survivor saved by Lutz’s efforts. Pascale Baeriswyl, Ambassador of Switzerland to the United Nations, will deliver the introductory speech. $10 suggested donation.

6pm
Gibney, 53A Chambers Street
Sahar Damoni shares the context and journey that has shaped her life and work as a Palestinian artist in Israel/Palestine, sharing key, life-changing moments that led her to choose dance and choreography as tools of expression. $15-$20.

6pm
Livestreamed
Agenda
  • Seaport Museum updates - Captain Jonathan Boulware, Executive Director
  • Ramapo Munsee Land Acknowledgement at the Titanic Memorial
  • Reimagining Park Row - the Southern Gateway To Chinatown
  • Elizabeth Jennings Graham Monument
  • Archaeology Updates at the 250 Water Street Excavation
Wednesday, January 18
1pm
200 Rector Place
Directed by Church Street School of Music, the chorus is open to all who love to sing. Free.

6pm
Livestreamed
Agenda
  • Issues around the Holland Tunnel
  • Vendor issues on the Brooklyn Bridge
  • Mayor’s new mental health initiative

8pm
Gibney, 53A Chambers Street
Two multi-hyphenate artists share excerpts from their new book projects—Daniel Alexander Jones’ Love as Light and jaamil olawale kosoko’s Black Body Amnesia–and discuss the process for creating as a source of healing self and community. $15-$20.
Lower Manhattan Greenmarkets

Tribeca Greenmarket
Greenwich Street & Chambers Street
Saturdays, 8am-3pm (compost program 8am-1pm)

Fulton Stall Market (indoor)
91 South Street, between Fulton & John Streets
Monday through Saturday,11:30am-5pm
Today in History
January 17
James Cook was an explorer, cartographer, and captain in the British Royal Navy, famous for voyages between 1768 and 1779 in which he and his crew sailed thousands of miles across largely uncharted areas of the globe. This map shows the routes of Captain Cook's voyages (first voyage: red, second voyage: green, third voyage: blue. The route of Cook's crew following his death is shown as a dashed blue line.) On this day in 1773 he became the first to cross the Antarctic Circle. Exactly six years later, he recorded his last notation in the ship's log. He was killed in February 1779. Map by John Platek.
1524Giovanni da Verrazzano sets sail westward from Madeira to find a sea route to the Pacific Ocean.
1773 - Captain James Cook becomes first to cross Antarctic Circle
1779 - Captain James Cook's last notation in Discovery's ship's log
1917 – The United States pays Denmark $25 million for the Virgin Islands.
1920 - First day of prohibition of alcohol comes into effect in the US as a result of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution
1929Popeye the Sailor Man, a cartoon character created by E. C. Segar, first appears in the Thimble Theatre comic strip.
1945 – Swedish diplomat Raoul Wallenberg is taken into Soviet custody while in Hungary; he is never publicly seen again.
1950 – The Great Brink's Robbery: Eleven thieves steal more than $2 million from an armored car company's offices in Boston.
1977Capital punishment in the United States resumes after a ten-year hiatus, as convicted murderer Gary Gilmore is executed by firing squad in Utah.
1991 - Operation Desert Storm begins, with US-led coalition forces bombing Iraq, during the Gulf War
2021 - Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny is arrested immediately on his return to Russia after recovering from nerve-agent poisoning

Births
1706 – Benjamin Franklin, publisher, inventor, and politician, 6th President of Pennsylvania (d. 1790)
1876 – Frank Hague, lawyer and politician, 30th Mayor of Jersey City (d. 1956)
1899 – Al Capone, mob boss (d. 1947)
1942 – Muhammad Ali, boxer and activist (d. 2016)
1964 – Michelle Obama, lawyer and activist, 46th First Lady of the United States
1997 - Maxwell Frost, politician (first Generation Z member elected to US Congress, Rep-R-Florida)

Deaths
1888 – Big Bear, Canadian tribal chief (b. 1825)
1893 – Rutherford B. Hayes, general, lawyer, 19th President of the United States (b. 1822)
1933 – Louis Comfort Tiffany, stained glass artist (b. 1848)
1997 – Clyde Tombaugh, astronomer and academic, discovered Pluto (b. 1906)
2007 – Art Buchwald, journalist and author (b. 1925)
2008 – Bobby Fischer, chess player and author (b. 1943)
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