Let's start with Sophia's neighborhood. The East Village is built on contrasts and contradictions. To begin with, it wasn't always called that; for a long time, it was simply the northern part of the Lower East Side, located between Third Avenue and Avenue A, and 14th and Houston Street. By the end of the 60s, that had changed. The migration of Beatniks into the neighborhood attracted hippies, musicians, writers, and artists who had been priced out of Greenwich Village, and within a couple of decades, it became a countercultural mecca and haven for artists, misfits, and rebels. It was home to CBGB – where punk bands like the Ramones, the Voidoids, and Television got their start; Tompkins Square Park – a popular hangout for Allen Ginsberg and other Beat poets; and the Nuyorican Poets Cafe – where many explored themes related to cultural identity and civil rights.
The story isn’t new. New York is in a constant state of flux and the East Village is only one example of the neighborhoods forged on this inevitable premise. The process of gentrification began long before Izzy and Sophia were born, and although the term only recently gained prevalence in our cultural lexicon, the two natives share a sensitivity to the city’s changing nature.
Despite the hierarchies of separation that exist in the neighborhoods across the city, there is a throughline that connects every person. Here, millions of people and their universes coexist, converging into a city filled with endless possibilities. As a native New Yorker myself, born to a mother from the Dominican Republic and a father from Bangladesh, my identity and the city's are inseperable. I would not exist in the way that I am today if they were never drawn by the city's promise and although I grew up in the Bronx, miles away from Izzy or Sophia, it is hard to not feel as if we are all part of the same story.