Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn A Healing and Meditative Landscape | Page 21

Angels in flight in stone Move after life- An eternal dance beyond time Bringing borrowed wisdom. Excerpt from “A Trade” by Nancy Rappaport eye—often an angel or sculpture of a child— read the inscriptions, and discuss the symbolism and the stories. Increasingly, these monuments would move Nancy to write. She began taking notes and asking questions. I showed Nancy my favorite places as well as other destinations to seek out on her own: Alice Fountain, the Dorothea Dix monument, the Magoun monument. What Nancy discovered was a sense of solace from the extraordinary integration of funerary art and horticulture. It was a different feeling than a hike in the woods, and this difference surprised her. Returning time and time again, Nancy began to experience the transformative power of Mount Auburn. She began to write about the landscape, the monuments, and her experience in the Cemetery, often in poems or verse. I soon learned that she was creating a narrative that would become her first play, Regeneration. The American journalist Ellen Goodman recently described Mount Auburn as “an extraordinary example of life co-existing with death.” In our walks together, Nancy sensed the sacredness of the landscape, that it is a place of great emotion, where, like Nancy, visitors come to courageously work through the complex emotions of grief and loss. Thankfully, Nancy has fully recovered and cancer is in her past. She has given us the gift of her play, which she calls a love letter to Mount Auburn Cemetery. Thank you, Nancy. As someone who has devoted her life to helping others, she recognizes that when we visit Mount Auburn, we leave the better for it. In the words of Justice Joseph Story, we leave the Cemetery feeling “purer, and better, and wiser, from this communion with the dead.” Dr. Nancy Rappaport is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and a child psychiatrist at the Cambridge Health Alliance. For twenty-three years, she has worked with at the health center of the Cambridge Public Schools where she specializes in developing concrete strategies for struggling students and offers professional development for teachers. In 2009, Dr. Rappaport published In Her Wake: A Child Psychiatrist Explores the Mystery of Her Mother’s Suicide (Basic Books), for which she was awarded the Julia Ward Howe Book Award from the Boston Authors Club. Dr. Rappaport is also co-author of The Behavior Code (Harvard Education Press, 2012), a book for teachers offering concrete strategies to work with children displaying oppositional, anxious, sexualized, or withdrawn behavior. Meg Winslow (r) with Nancy Rappaport (l) standing next to the statue of Hygeia, Goddess of Health and Hygiene, commissioned by Dr. Harriot Kezia Hunt (1805–1875) for her lot (2630 Poplar Avenue) at Mount Auburn, and carved by Edmonia Lewis (1844–1907). 2018 Volume 1 | 19