About Julie Kabat

Julie Kabat

Julie Kabat has toured internationally as a composer, performer, singer, and storyteller. She has also been recognized as a pioneer in the field of arts in education. As a teaching artist, she presented many professional development workshops for teachers to explore how children can learn to read and write using strategies from the performing arts. For over forty years, she worked with students in inner city and rural schools, empowering young people to discover an authentic writer's voice while learning how to write poems, stories, and plays that they set to music and performed.

Julie's compositions include vocal, choral, theater and chamber music. She composed a series of site-specific pieces to celebrate the earth and a sense of place. These works were commissioned by the Utah New Music Festival in Zion Canyon, Adirondack Park Centennial, two schools on the Navajo Reservation and, during a twelve-year project, communities up and down the Hudson River. She created and toured Child and the Moon-Tree, a one-woman opera for voice and computerized synthesizers, inspired by her studies of Noh Theater in Kyoto, Japan.

Along the way, Julie raised her two daughters as a single mom and now visits her five grandchildren who live in Hawaii and the Netherlands. She resides with her life partner Wayne Shelton and their cat in the Hudson River Valley down the street from the North Chatham Free Library where she is a longtime trustee. Love Letter from Pig is her first published book.

"Although Luke was eight years older, he treated me like an equal, and I never questioned the bond we had.

'Hey Pig, let's go,' Luke would say. He'd turn and walk away, nonchalantly waving for me to follow him. Like an eager puppy, I always did."

–– Julie Kabat

Media

QWERTY Podcast

An interview by Marion Roach Smith: How to Use Family Letters to Write Memoir. The episode can also be found on Spotify here.

Mississippi Civil Rights Museum – Excerpt of Q&A

Lenray Gandy, who was 9 years old during Freedom Summer, surprises Julie Kabat and Gail Falk (Luke's fellow Freedom School teacher) at the end of their 'History is Lunch' presentation at the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, Jackson, MS

Freedom Summer and its Aftermath— Making History

In 1964, the murders of three young civil rights workers––Mickey Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman––shocked the nation. This conversation reflects on the community’s silent march to James Chaney’s funeral.

A conversation with author Julie Kabat, Gail Falk (Freedom Summer volunteer) and Andreesa Coleman (Freedom School student). Introduction by Steve Yates, Associate Director/Marketing Director, University Press of Mississippi.

Lessons in Social Justice and Medicine from Freedom Summer 1964

Freedom Summer was a tipping point. What major changes in healthcare occurred as a result? Julie Kabat presents an Ethics Grand Rounds at the Alden March Bioethics Center, followed by dialogue with medical students and faculty, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY.

Relationships: Breaking Down Barriers During Freedom Summer 1964

What was the experience of segregation, and how did Freedom Summer begin to break down racial barriers?

A conversation with author Julie Kabat, Gail Falk (Freedom Summer volunteer) and Andreesa Coleman (Freedom School student). Introduction by Steve Yates, Associate Director/Marketing Director, University Press of Mississippi.

“The Journey to Freedom,” a video series co-produced by Paul Murray, sociologist and Siena College professor emeritus

The Journey to Freedom project has recorded the stories of women and men from the Capital Region of New York who participated in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. Many traveled to the segregated Deep South. Others were active in their home communities. All worked to advance social justice.

These videos show that the success of the Movement depended not only on the heroism of its celebrated leaders, but also on the dedication and sacrifices of many thousands of everyday people––the "foot soldiers" of the Movement.

Paul Murray, Co-Producer; Donald Hyman, Co-Producer; Zebulon Schmidt, Videographer; Kirk Daniels, Videographer

Presenting Julie Kabat, Composer/Performer: Excerpts from three works

A brief introduction to Julie’s earlier career as a concert artist.

Scroll in 10 seconds to begin viewing this video. Segments 1 & 3 are my favorites.

1) Voice with glass harmonica, based on a poem by Wallace Stevens

2) Voice with musical saw, & water jar, exploring the music of emotion that underlies speech

3) Voice, computerized synthesizers, and koto, incorporating elements of Japanese Noh Theater and based on a dream

Recorded and produced by Stan Davis.

History Is Lunch: Julie Kabat, "My Brother's Story of Freedom Summer"

Julie Kabat and Gail Falk (Luke's fellow Freedom School teacher) present this lecture, followed by Q&A. Recorded March 20, 2024, at the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, Jackson, MS.

Author Talk with Q&A for Jewish Community Center of Central New Jersey

Recording of a virtual author talk by Julie Kabat, presented January 24 for an in-person and Zoom audience. This was during the annual Holocaust Remembrance in the Netherlands.

Recommendations

5 Books that Build Compassion Around Issues of Race

5 Books that Build Compassion Around Issues of Race

Ben Fox, founder of Shepherd, writes that he “is on a mission to help everyone find the book they didn't know they were looking for.” He asks authors to share five of their favorite books around a topic, theme, or mood and why they love each book. Check it out!

Shepherd.com
Julie Kabat’s 3 favorite reads of 2024

Julie Kabat’s 3 favorite reads of 2024

Check it Out
QWERTY Podcast

QWERTY Podcast

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