Seaford
HERALD Citizen
Parade for Wantagh centenarian
Nassau honors tose who served
Inmates seek better conditions
Page 6
Page 9
Page 10
VOL. 68 NO. 23
JUNE 4 - 10, 2020
South Shore hamlets find bonds with food
PATRICK RYDER, THE NASSAU COUNTY POLICE COMMISSIONER, TOOK A KNEE AS A SIGN OF RESPECT AT THE PROEST.
Nearly three months later, donations collected solely through community activism When the coronavirus pan- and neighborly generosity have demic hit Nassau County in amounted to a total of $11,500 March, many worried about worth of food and gift cards. The their families’ health. They wor- donations went to medical faciliried about keeping their jobs. ties, churches, group homes, They were told to supermarket workstay inside and ers and needy famiavoid contact with lies. Jebaily said their neighbors. that the donors But many Seahave mostly been ford and Wantagh Seaford and Wantcommunity memagh residents. bers refused to be At the same held back from time, Jebaily raised helping their $1,450 for the John neighbors. On Theissen ChilMarch 30, commu- DONNA JEBAILY dren’s Foundation nity leader and Board member, and $400 for KarSeaford Chamber Seaford Chamber of en’s Hope, a nonof Commerce profit that provides b o a r d m e m b e r Commerce housing, as well as Donna Jebaily educational and called on her comsocial programs, for those with munity to donate to a cause. disabilities. “It started as a way to give Jebaily’s next goal was to back to medical workers by drive business back to local resdelivering food to them,” Jebaily taurants. She and her team have said. “The first one was to Nas- used the collections to buy food sau University Medical Center. from Seaford Bagels, Bayview From there, we started taking Tavern, Dang! BBQ, Guac Shop, collections.” Cara Mia, Rosario’s, Mario’s, Jebaily asked her neighbors Gusto Divino, Il Bacetto, Salpino, for $200 to feed a unit at NUMC. Little Kitchen, Tarallo’s, Gino’s, They raised around $1,000. She Brooklyn Square Pizza and Philtook that money to Cara Mia, in adelphia Pretzel Factory. They Seaford, one of many restau- have even ordered self-care and rants hit hard by the pandemic. beauty supply product goodie “I brought it to Sergio at Cara bags from CVS. Mia, and I said, ‘This is what we “As a Chamber of Commerce have, feed as many people as you member, when we decided to do can for this,’” Jebaily recounted. this, we wanted to try to take “It initially started as one meal, care of businesses in need,” and then it hasn’t stopped since Jebaily said. “The only ones realMarch.” CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
BY J.D. FREDA
jfreda@liherald.com
Y
ou’re only as impactful as the people who surround you.
Darwin Yanes/Herald
Advocacy groups hold George Floyd protest in Mineola By SCOTT BRINTON, RONNY REYES and DARWIN YANES
sbrinton@liherald.com, rreyes@liherald.com, dyanes@liherald.com.
People started to stream into the demonstration in front of the Nassau County Legislature and Executive Building in Mineola nearly an hour before the scheduled 5:30 p.m. start time. They had come to protest the killing of
George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. Shouting “I can’t breathe” and brandishing handmade signs, they arrived from all across the county and beyond. A coalition of Nassau advocacy groups planned the protest, “Justice for George Floyd.” The demonstration followed the Memorial Day
death of Floyd, 46, an African-American man who died after officer Derek Chauvin, 44, pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes before he stopped speaking or moving. According to authorities, police, responded to a report of a man attempting to pass a counterfeit $20 at a shop. “What happened to CONTINUED ON PAGE 16